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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – With more COVID-19 vaccine doses arriving this week, Lake County Public Health said it’s opening up a limited number of appointments for county residents aged 65 and older to receive their first dose.
Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace told the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday morning that the increase in new COVID-19 cases is slowing in Lake County.
About 10 percent of Lake County’s 64,000 residents have received the first dose of the vaccine so far, while about 1,000 people have received both doses, he said.
Altogether, he said the county has 50,000 residents age 18 or older who are eligible to receive the vaccine when their respective priority tiers open.
The challenge remains the supply, with Pace explaining that his department is trying to line up appointments with available vaccine doses one week at a time.
He said Lake County’s latest allocation is for 1,000 doses that is to arrive this week.
Both Sutter Lakeside Hospital and Adventist Health Clear Lake Hospital have been receiving their own supplies, but Pace said they’ve had to slow down their vaccination effort due to supply issues.
“They’re a big part of why we’ve been able to get so many people vaccinated so quickly in the county,” Pace said.
He said Public Health will be switching its vaccination efforts to a drive-thru model starting next week.
Pace said they have been getting a lot of help with running their clinics from volunteers.
“The community just keeps showing up day after day,” he said, adding that Public Health staff can’t do it by themselves.
Public Health said later on Tuesday that it’s opening up a limited number of vaccination appointments for Friday, Feb. 12, and Saturday, Feb. 13, in Clearlake for those age 65 and older.
To register, click here: http://health.co.lake.ca.us/Coronavirus/Vaccines.htm.
Residents 65 and older who do not have the ability to schedule online can call 707-993-4644 for assistance. Staff at that number do not have access to any additional appointments. Do not call this number if appointments are filled.
Appointments will fill up quickly. If you are eligible to be vaccinated, check the above link often, as additional appointment links will be added as they receive the vaccine.
For those health care providers and educators who are eligible for vaccination but missed earlier opportunities, emailThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and you will be contacted when a spot is available.
Email Elizabeth Larson atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace told the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday morning that the increase in new COVID-19 cases is slowing in Lake County.
About 10 percent of Lake County’s 64,000 residents have received the first dose of the vaccine so far, while about 1,000 people have received both doses, he said.
Altogether, he said the county has 50,000 residents age 18 or older who are eligible to receive the vaccine when their respective priority tiers open.
The challenge remains the supply, with Pace explaining that his department is trying to line up appointments with available vaccine doses one week at a time.
He said Lake County’s latest allocation is for 1,000 doses that is to arrive this week.
Both Sutter Lakeside Hospital and Adventist Health Clear Lake Hospital have been receiving their own supplies, but Pace said they’ve had to slow down their vaccination effort due to supply issues.
“They’re a big part of why we’ve been able to get so many people vaccinated so quickly in the county,” Pace said.
He said Public Health will be switching its vaccination efforts to a drive-thru model starting next week.
Pace said they have been getting a lot of help with running their clinics from volunteers.
“The community just keeps showing up day after day,” he said, adding that Public Health staff can’t do it by themselves.
Public Health said later on Tuesday that it’s opening up a limited number of vaccination appointments for Friday, Feb. 12, and Saturday, Feb. 13, in Clearlake for those age 65 and older.
To register, click here: http://health.co.lake.ca.us/Coronavirus/Vaccines.htm.
Residents 65 and older who do not have the ability to schedule online can call 707-993-4644 for assistance. Staff at that number do not have access to any additional appointments. Do not call this number if appointments are filled.
Appointments will fill up quickly. If you are eligible to be vaccinated, check the above link often, as additional appointment links will be added as they receive the vaccine.
For those health care providers and educators who are eligible for vaccination but missed earlier opportunities, email
Email Elizabeth Larson at
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – During a short meeting on Tuesday night, the Clearlake Planning Commission approved a new drive-thru bakery and coffee shop.
The commission gave unanimous consent for the new drive-thru at 15090 Olympic Drive, proposed by Pascal Hue De Laroque, who owns a drive-thru in Clearlake Oaks, Marcel’s French Bakery & Cafe, as well as a coffee shop by the same name in downtown Lakeport.
The city’s zoning code defines drive-thrus as a “special use” that are required to secure a use permit.
Senior Planner Mark Roberts’ written report to the commission noted that drive-thrus are recognized as having some “objectionable characteristics, such as noise, idling vehicles and traffic conflicts,” so that “special regulation review” of these special uses is necessary.
Assistant Planner Susanna Amaro-Gutierrez told the commission that the drive-thru aspect of the project triggered review, otherwise, it would have been an over-the-counter business license check.
Roberts told the commission that Hue De Laroque’s proposal does not currently include indoor or outdoor sitdown dining.
The building that will be used for the shop – previously a single-family residence – was remodeled in 2017 for the use of a bakery, Classy Cakes, which operated in that location until recently, according to the staff report.
Roberts said the project involves minor renovations, including the installation of a drive-thru window on the west side of the building and new signage, upgrading the exterior lighting fixtures, trimming the overgrowth off the entryway tree, installing a brand-new security system with generous coverage of traffic on Olympic Drive, and other aesthetic improvements.
He said there will be one-way traffic through the drive-thru, with customers to enter through the existing 19-foot-wide driveway located on the eastern portion along Olympic Drive. They would exit on the western portion of Olympic Drive through another existing driveway which is 35 feet wide.
Commissioner Lisa Wilson asked if a traffic study was conducted for the project. Roberts said no, as it wasn’t required.
As proposed, Hue De Laroque’s drive-thru would accommodate stacking of up to seven vehicles at a time, with two employees present at any given time, according to the staff report.
Commissioner Erin McCarrick asked Hue De Laroque if people would be able to wait for orders in parking spaces. He said they would have stalls to pull into, so they would be able to stack a total of 15 vehicles.
Commissioner Fawn Williams asked about signage to indicate the one-way traffic through the site. Hue De Laroque said he plans on putting up “do not enter” signage and paint on the pavement to direct traffic.
During public comment, Roberts read emails that included messages from two individuals who are negotiating with the city to open a drive-thru coffee kiosk, a Mudslingers franchise, near the recycling center in the Burns Valley Mall.
They said their project will not have an impact on traffic on Olympic Drive, and questioned the close proximity of Hue De Laroque’s project to theirs; mapping shows the two sites are about a third of a mile apart. One of the Mudslingers representatives asked for his project to be denied.
On the issue of fairness raised by Mudslingers, Commissioner Robert Coker asked if it’s fair to allow the Mudslingers drive-thru to locate near the Sisters Coffee House, which also is in the Burns Valley Mall.
Roberts said the city gives everyone equal opportunity to apply to open a business, operate, bring revenue and better the community.
“I’m good with that answer,” Coker said.
Commission Chair Kathryn Davis asked Hue De Laroque if he would still want to do a drive-thru if it weren’t for COVID-19.
He replied that he wanted to put in a drive-thru in Clearlake two years ago, before he opened his drive-thru in Clearlake Oaks, but at that time there wasn’t a location available.
Davis also asked him about his hours of operation. He said he wants to operate 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., seven days a week.
McCarrick moved to approve a resolution approving the use permit application, which Coker seconded and the commission approved 5-0.
City Manager Alan Flora told Lake County News that Clearlake has only one other drive-thru coffee shop currently operating, Catfish Coffee. A Starbucks on Dam Road that hasn’t been built yet also has been permitted for a drive-thru.
Email Elizabeth Larson atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
The commission gave unanimous consent for the new drive-thru at 15090 Olympic Drive, proposed by Pascal Hue De Laroque, who owns a drive-thru in Clearlake Oaks, Marcel’s French Bakery & Cafe, as well as a coffee shop by the same name in downtown Lakeport.
The city’s zoning code defines drive-thrus as a “special use” that are required to secure a use permit.
Senior Planner Mark Roberts’ written report to the commission noted that drive-thrus are recognized as having some “objectionable characteristics, such as noise, idling vehicles and traffic conflicts,” so that “special regulation review” of these special uses is necessary.
Assistant Planner Susanna Amaro-Gutierrez told the commission that the drive-thru aspect of the project triggered review, otherwise, it would have been an over-the-counter business license check.
Roberts told the commission that Hue De Laroque’s proposal does not currently include indoor or outdoor sitdown dining.
The building that will be used for the shop – previously a single-family residence – was remodeled in 2017 for the use of a bakery, Classy Cakes, which operated in that location until recently, according to the staff report.
Roberts said the project involves minor renovations, including the installation of a drive-thru window on the west side of the building and new signage, upgrading the exterior lighting fixtures, trimming the overgrowth off the entryway tree, installing a brand-new security system with generous coverage of traffic on Olympic Drive, and other aesthetic improvements.
He said there will be one-way traffic through the drive-thru, with customers to enter through the existing 19-foot-wide driveway located on the eastern portion along Olympic Drive. They would exit on the western portion of Olympic Drive through another existing driveway which is 35 feet wide.
Commissioner Lisa Wilson asked if a traffic study was conducted for the project. Roberts said no, as it wasn’t required.
As proposed, Hue De Laroque’s drive-thru would accommodate stacking of up to seven vehicles at a time, with two employees present at any given time, according to the staff report.
Commissioner Erin McCarrick asked Hue De Laroque if people would be able to wait for orders in parking spaces. He said they would have stalls to pull into, so they would be able to stack a total of 15 vehicles.
Commissioner Fawn Williams asked about signage to indicate the one-way traffic through the site. Hue De Laroque said he plans on putting up “do not enter” signage and paint on the pavement to direct traffic.
During public comment, Roberts read emails that included messages from two individuals who are negotiating with the city to open a drive-thru coffee kiosk, a Mudslingers franchise, near the recycling center in the Burns Valley Mall.
They said their project will not have an impact on traffic on Olympic Drive, and questioned the close proximity of Hue De Laroque’s project to theirs; mapping shows the two sites are about a third of a mile apart. One of the Mudslingers representatives asked for his project to be denied.
On the issue of fairness raised by Mudslingers, Commissioner Robert Coker asked if it’s fair to allow the Mudslingers drive-thru to locate near the Sisters Coffee House, which also is in the Burns Valley Mall.
Roberts said the city gives everyone equal opportunity to apply to open a business, operate, bring revenue and better the community.
“I’m good with that answer,” Coker said.
Commission Chair Kathryn Davis asked Hue De Laroque if he would still want to do a drive-thru if it weren’t for COVID-19.
He replied that he wanted to put in a drive-thru in Clearlake two years ago, before he opened his drive-thru in Clearlake Oaks, but at that time there wasn’t a location available.
Davis also asked him about his hours of operation. He said he wants to operate 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., seven days a week.
McCarrick moved to approve a resolution approving the use permit application, which Coker seconded and the commission approved 5-0.
City Manager Alan Flora told Lake County News that Clearlake has only one other drive-thru coffee shop currently operating, Catfish Coffee. A Starbucks on Dam Road that hasn’t been built yet also has been permitted for a drive-thru.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Deputies’ ability to administer Narcan saved the life of a female inmate at the Lake County Jail over the weekend.
Narcan, also known as Naloxone, is a medication used to reverse the effects of opioid drugs, including overdose.
Lt. Corey Paulich of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office said the incident involving the female inmate, whose name was not released, occurred on Saturday.
Paulich said that at 2:40 p.m. Saturday jail inmates reported to a tower officer that there may be an inmate overdosing in a female dorm.
He said deputies rushed to check the status of all inmates and found a female inmate lying on her side.
The woman didn’t appear to be breathing and was blue in the face, Paulich said.
Paulich said the correctional deputies administered a dose of Narcan. They also requested jail medical staff respond as well as paramedics.
When nurses from jail medical staff arrived, Paulich said they found it necessary to administer two more doses of Narcan to the inmate.
Shortly afterward, the Narcan began to take effect and within 10 minutes the inmate began to slowly regain consciousness and was breathing on her own, Paulich said.
Paramedics from the Lakeport Fire Protection District arrived and transported the inmate to Sutter Lakeside Hospital by ambulance. Paulich said the woman was treated and later returned to the jail facility.
“We do not have the results of what she may have taken,” Paulich told Lake County News.
Deputies conducted a search of the dormitory as well as the inmates but didn’t locate any contraband. The inmates from that dorm were tested to determine if they recently used drugs, but all tests were negative, Paulich said.
Paulich said sheriff’s correctional staffers use several different methods in an attempt to keep contraband from entering the facility, but controlled substances are easy to conceal and hard to detect.
He said this was the third time Narcan has been administered at the jail in the two years the sheriff’s office has provided Narcan for use by its personnel.
Law enforcement agencies in neighboring counties also are using Narcan in medical emergencies.
In Mendocino County, the sheriff’s office began to issue Narcan to deputies in April 2019 as part of their assigned personal protective equipment due.
Since then, the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office has reported numerous incidents during which deputies have administered Narcan to individuals having drug-related medical emergencies.
The Mendocino Sheriff’s Office also reported that in December Narcan saved a jail inmate there. The corrections deputy who found the inmate also later needed a dose himself after having been exposed to a plastic bundle that had been in the inmate’s possession and which was found to contain fentanyl, a powerful and deadly opiate.
In Sonoma County, the sheriff’s office reported its first use of Narcan in July, when a sheriff’s deputy used it to save the life of a man who had just been arrested.
By that time, Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies had been carrying Narcan in their patrol cars for about six months, the agency reported.
The Lake County Sheriff’s Office reminded the public that taking any medication or pills that have not been prescribed to you by a physician or provided to you by a pharmacist is dangerous.
Opiates such as fentanyl can be fatal with the ingestion of only 2 to 3 milligrams, Paulich said.
Email Elizabeth Larson atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
Narcan, also known as Naloxone, is a medication used to reverse the effects of opioid drugs, including overdose.
Lt. Corey Paulich of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office said the incident involving the female inmate, whose name was not released, occurred on Saturday.
Paulich said that at 2:40 p.m. Saturday jail inmates reported to a tower officer that there may be an inmate overdosing in a female dorm.
He said deputies rushed to check the status of all inmates and found a female inmate lying on her side.
The woman didn’t appear to be breathing and was blue in the face, Paulich said.
Paulich said the correctional deputies administered a dose of Narcan. They also requested jail medical staff respond as well as paramedics.
When nurses from jail medical staff arrived, Paulich said they found it necessary to administer two more doses of Narcan to the inmate.
Shortly afterward, the Narcan began to take effect and within 10 minutes the inmate began to slowly regain consciousness and was breathing on her own, Paulich said.
Paramedics from the Lakeport Fire Protection District arrived and transported the inmate to Sutter Lakeside Hospital by ambulance. Paulich said the woman was treated and later returned to the jail facility.
“We do not have the results of what she may have taken,” Paulich told Lake County News.
Deputies conducted a search of the dormitory as well as the inmates but didn’t locate any contraband. The inmates from that dorm were tested to determine if they recently used drugs, but all tests were negative, Paulich said.
Paulich said sheriff’s correctional staffers use several different methods in an attempt to keep contraband from entering the facility, but controlled substances are easy to conceal and hard to detect.
He said this was the third time Narcan has been administered at the jail in the two years the sheriff’s office has provided Narcan for use by its personnel.
Law enforcement agencies in neighboring counties also are using Narcan in medical emergencies.
In Mendocino County, the sheriff’s office began to issue Narcan to deputies in April 2019 as part of their assigned personal protective equipment due.
Since then, the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office has reported numerous incidents during which deputies have administered Narcan to individuals having drug-related medical emergencies.
The Mendocino Sheriff’s Office also reported that in December Narcan saved a jail inmate there. The corrections deputy who found the inmate also later needed a dose himself after having been exposed to a plastic bundle that had been in the inmate’s possession and which was found to contain fentanyl, a powerful and deadly opiate.
In Sonoma County, the sheriff’s office reported its first use of Narcan in July, when a sheriff’s deputy used it to save the life of a man who had just been arrested.
By that time, Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies had been carrying Narcan in their patrol cars for about six months, the agency reported.
The Lake County Sheriff’s Office reminded the public that taking any medication or pills that have not been prescribed to you by a physician or provided to you by a pharmacist is dangerous.
Opiates such as fentanyl can be fatal with the ingestion of only 2 to 3 milligrams, Paulich said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The Middletown Area Town Hall will meet this week to discuss items including Middletown’s stop signs and rescheduling the group’s monthly meetings.
MATH will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb.11, via Zoom. The meeting is open to the public.
To join the Zoom meeting click on this link; the meeting ID is 935 1671 5770. Call in at 888-788-0099.
At 7:10 p.m., the group will discuss and vote on a proposal to change the MATH meeting to the third of the month.
MATH also will host a discussion on stop signs in Middletown.
There also will be opportunities for public input and discussion of items to place on the March 11 agenda.
The MATH Board includes Co-Chairs Rosemary Córdova and Monica Rosenthal, Secretary Lisa Kaplan, and Ken Gonzales and Paul Baker.
MATH – established by resolution of the Lake County Board of Supervisors on Dec. 12, 2006 – is a municipal advisory council serving the residents of Anderson Springs, Cobb, Coyote Valley (including Hidden Valley Lake), Long Valley and Middletown.
For more information emailThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
Email Elizabeth Larson atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
MATH will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb.11, via Zoom. The meeting is open to the public.
To join the Zoom meeting click on this link; the meeting ID is 935 1671 5770. Call in at 888-788-0099.
At 7:10 p.m., the group will discuss and vote on a proposal to change the MATH meeting to the third of the month.
MATH also will host a discussion on stop signs in Middletown.
There also will be opportunities for public input and discussion of items to place on the March 11 agenda.
The MATH Board includes Co-Chairs Rosemary Córdova and Monica Rosenthal, Secretary Lisa Kaplan, and Ken Gonzales and Paul Baker.
MATH – established by resolution of the Lake County Board of Supervisors on Dec. 12, 2006 – is a municipal advisory council serving the residents of Anderson Springs, Cobb, Coyote Valley (including Hidden Valley Lake), Long Valley and Middletown.
For more information email
Email Elizabeth Larson at
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – On Monday, Pacific Gas and Electric Co. filed a proposal with the California Public Utilities Commission in which the company outlined its plans to continue efforts to reduce wildfire risk and use new technologies that increase situational awareness.
The company said the ongoing strategy detailed in its 2021 Wildfire Mitigation Plan is meant to help keep customers and communities safe by enhancing its Community Wildfire Safety Program.
The 1,013-page plan can be found here.
It is subject to public review and approval by the CPUC. Customers and communities can follow the proceeding and offer comments through the CPUC website.
The Community Wildfire Safety Program, which PG&E launched in March 2018 – five months after fires caused by its equipment tore through the North Bay, including Lake County – is designed to address the growing threat of severe weather and wildfires across PG&E’s 70,000-square-mile service area that stretches across Northern and Central California.
“The last few years have demonstrated how California’s wildfire season continues to grow longer and more devastating. We are continuing to evolve to meet the challenging conditions to more effectively reduce wildfire risk,” said Sumeet Singh, senior vice president and chief risk officer. “We are accountable to our customers and our communities that we are privileged to serve. The safety actions and programs outlined in our Wildfire Mitigation Plan provide details for our continued commitment to the critical work of providing safe and reliable service.”
PG&E said its new plan focuses on key areas including reducing wildfire potential by inspecting and repairing equipment, conducting enhanced vegetation management, and investing in grid technology and system hardening; improving situational awareness by installing weather stations and high-definition cameras throughout PG&E’s service area, investing in PG&E’s Wildfire Safety Operations Center that monitors high-fire threat areas in real time, and investing in meteorology to monitor weather conditions; and continuing to make the PSPS program better and build on the improvements from the 2020 program by upgrading the electric system to ensure PSPS is a last resort and improving support for impacted customers and communities when PSPS is necessary.
In Lake County, upgrades that PG&E spokeswoman Deanna Contreras said are part of the plan include the building of two new microgrids, one in Lucerne and one in Middletown.
Contreras pointed out that PG&E’s efforts to continue to improve the PSPS program also impacted Lake County, where far fewer customers were impacted by proactive power shutoffs in 2020 than in 2019.
As of the end of 2020, Lake County had 30 weather stations and seven cameras installed and being used by PG&E to monitor conditions. Contreras said 12 of those weather stations were installed in 2020.
PG&E said the forecasted cost of wildfire mitigation programs described in the plan is about $3 billion each year for two years – 2021 and 2022.
The costs reflect what the company said is its best estimate of the costs for the proposed programs as of Feb. 5. Actual costs may vary substantially depending on actual conditions and requirements.
Email Elizabeth Larson atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
The company said the ongoing strategy detailed in its 2021 Wildfire Mitigation Plan is meant to help keep customers and communities safe by enhancing its Community Wildfire Safety Program.
The 1,013-page plan can be found here.
It is subject to public review and approval by the CPUC. Customers and communities can follow the proceeding and offer comments through the CPUC website.
The Community Wildfire Safety Program, which PG&E launched in March 2018 – five months after fires caused by its equipment tore through the North Bay, including Lake County – is designed to address the growing threat of severe weather and wildfires across PG&E’s 70,000-square-mile service area that stretches across Northern and Central California.
“The last few years have demonstrated how California’s wildfire season continues to grow longer and more devastating. We are continuing to evolve to meet the challenging conditions to more effectively reduce wildfire risk,” said Sumeet Singh, senior vice president and chief risk officer. “We are accountable to our customers and our communities that we are privileged to serve. The safety actions and programs outlined in our Wildfire Mitigation Plan provide details for our continued commitment to the critical work of providing safe and reliable service.”
PG&E said its new plan focuses on key areas including reducing wildfire potential by inspecting and repairing equipment, conducting enhanced vegetation management, and investing in grid technology and system hardening; improving situational awareness by installing weather stations and high-definition cameras throughout PG&E’s service area, investing in PG&E’s Wildfire Safety Operations Center that monitors high-fire threat areas in real time, and investing in meteorology to monitor weather conditions; and continuing to make the PSPS program better and build on the improvements from the 2020 program by upgrading the electric system to ensure PSPS is a last resort and improving support for impacted customers and communities when PSPS is necessary.
In Lake County, upgrades that PG&E spokeswoman Deanna Contreras said are part of the plan include the building of two new microgrids, one in Lucerne and one in Middletown.
Contreras pointed out that PG&E’s efforts to continue to improve the PSPS program also impacted Lake County, where far fewer customers were impacted by proactive power shutoffs in 2020 than in 2019.
As of the end of 2020, Lake County had 30 weather stations and seven cameras installed and being used by PG&E to monitor conditions. Contreras said 12 of those weather stations were installed in 2020.
PG&E said the forecasted cost of wildfire mitigation programs described in the plan is about $3 billion each year for two years – 2021 and 2022.
The costs reflect what the company said is its best estimate of the costs for the proposed programs as of Feb. 5. Actual costs may vary substantially depending on actual conditions and requirements.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Clearlake Planning Commission this week will consider a proposal for a new drive-thru bakery and coffee shop proposed for the city.
The commission will meet virtually beginning at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9.
The agenda can be found here.
Submit comments and questions in writing for commission consideration by sending them toThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Identify the subject you wish to comment on in your email’s subject line.
Community members also can participate via Zoom.
To give the planning commission adequate time to review your questions and comments, please submit written comments prior to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9.
The meet will be broadcast live on the Youtube channels for the city of Clearlake or Lake County PEG TV.
On the agenda is a public hearing to adopt a resolution to approve a use permit application for the operation of a drive-thru baker and coffee shop using existing facilities at 15090 Olympic Drive, and finding the project exempt from environmental review.
Pascal Hue De Laroque is applying to open the business at the former location of Classy Cakes, which operated there until July 2017, according to the staff report from Senior Planner Mark Roberts.
“While the proposed business plan utilizes the existing site facilities it should be noted that sit-down dining (indoor or outdoor) is not included at this time and has been excluded from the project analysis,” Roberts wrote in his report.
“The application does involve some minor renovations, including the installation of a drive through window on the west side of the building and new signage. Current tenant improvements involve upgrading the exterior lighting fixtures, trimming the overgrowth off the entryway tree, and installing a brand-new security system (with generous coverage of traffic on Olympic Drive), as well as various other aesthetic improvements,” he said.
Roberts said the proposed project is located within the Mixed Use Zoning District and is designated mixed use by the general plan land use map.
The city’s zoning code determines drive-thrus – which are defined as a “special use” – are allowable use upon securing a use permit, Roberts said.
“It is recognized that these facilities, by their very nature, have some objectionable characteristics, such as noise, idling vehicles and traffic conflicts. In order to protect and preserve public health, safety and welfare, special regulation review of these uses is necessary,” he said.
The commission’s members are Chair Kathryn Davis, Vice Chair Robert Coker and commissioners Lisa Wilson, Erin McCarrick and Fawn Williams.
Email Elizabeth Larson atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
The commission will meet virtually beginning at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9.
The agenda can be found here.
Submit comments and questions in writing for commission consideration by sending them to
Community members also can participate via Zoom.
To give the planning commission adequate time to review your questions and comments, please submit written comments prior to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9.
The meet will be broadcast live on the Youtube channels for the city of Clearlake or Lake County PEG TV.
On the agenda is a public hearing to adopt a resolution to approve a use permit application for the operation of a drive-thru baker and coffee shop using existing facilities at 15090 Olympic Drive, and finding the project exempt from environmental review.
Pascal Hue De Laroque is applying to open the business at the former location of Classy Cakes, which operated there until July 2017, according to the staff report from Senior Planner Mark Roberts.
“While the proposed business plan utilizes the existing site facilities it should be noted that sit-down dining (indoor or outdoor) is not included at this time and has been excluded from the project analysis,” Roberts wrote in his report.
“The application does involve some minor renovations, including the installation of a drive through window on the west side of the building and new signage. Current tenant improvements involve upgrading the exterior lighting fixtures, trimming the overgrowth off the entryway tree, and installing a brand-new security system (with generous coverage of traffic on Olympic Drive), as well as various other aesthetic improvements,” he said.
Roberts said the proposed project is located within the Mixed Use Zoning District and is designated mixed use by the general plan land use map.
The city’s zoning code determines drive-thrus – which are defined as a “special use” – are allowable use upon securing a use permit, Roberts said.
“It is recognized that these facilities, by their very nature, have some objectionable characteristics, such as noise, idling vehicles and traffic conflicts. In order to protect and preserve public health, safety and welfare, special regulation review of these uses is necessary,” he said.
The commission’s members are Chair Kathryn Davis, Vice Chair Robert Coker and commissioners Lisa Wilson, Erin McCarrick and Fawn Williams.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
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