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News

Traffic stop leads to large-scale drug seizure

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A weekend traffic stop led authorities to seize a large amount of hallucinogenic mushrooms and hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, and arrest a North Coast man.

Lake County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Lauren Berlinn said 31-year-old Alexander Abare of Arcata was arrested during the stop.

At approximately 1:45 a.m. Saturday, July 26, a Lake County Sheriff’s deputy conducted a traffic stop on a transit-style van traveling along Highway 20 in Upper Lake, Berlinn said.

When contacting the driver, identified as Abare, Berlinn said the deputy observed signs consistent with recent marijuana use and noted a strong odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle. 

Berlinn said Abare told the deputy he was returning to Arcata from the Sacramento area. During the interaction, he appeared visibly nervous. 

When questioned further, Abare admitted to having a bag of marijuana between the seats and a vape pen containing concentrated cannabis on the dashboard, Berlinn said.

The deputy’s search of the vehicle led to the discovery of approximately 400 pounds of psilocybin mushrooms, packaged in black plastic bags and large totes, each labeled with various strain names, according to Berlinn.

Berlinn said deputies also located more than $370,000 in cash, vacuum-sealed in multiple bundles.

Abare was arrested and booked on multiple charges, including felony transportation of a controlled substance for sale across county lines, possession of a controlled substance for sale, possession of a switchblade, and possession of an open container of marijuana in a vehicle, Berlinn said.

Berlinn said the investigation remains ongoing. 

Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Narcotics Taskforce Tipline at 707-263-3663.

Online town hall planned Aug. 11 for Potter Valley Project surrender application and decommission plan 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Pacific Gas and Electric Co. said it will hold an online meeting to discuss its plans to decommission and eventually remove the Potter Valley Project, which includes Lake Pillsbury.

The meeting will take place from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday, Aug. 11.

It can be accessed here.

Last week, PG&E filed its final surrender application and decommissioning plan for the Potter Valley Project to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or FERC.

PG&E has owned the Potter Valley Project, located in Lake and Mendocino counties, since 1930.

The Potter Valley Project, consists of two dams along the upper main stem of the Eel River, the Scott Dam and the Cape Horn Dam — as well as the Potter Valley powerhouse, the 80,000-acre-foot Lake Pillsbury in Lake County, the Van Arsdale Reservoir, a fish passage structure and salmon and steelhead counting station at the Cape Horn Dam, and and 5,600 acres of land.

During the virtual town hall, PG&E said it will discuss the overall regulatory process and note opportunities for public participation in the regulatory process.

The company has so far been unwilling to hold an in-person town hall in Lake County.

Gov. Newsom issues executive order to support young men and boys, address suicide rates

On Wednesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom issued an executive order to address a growing issue — the alarming rise in suicides and disconnection among California’s young men and boys. 

The order directs a coordinated statewide response to improve mental health outcomes, reduce stigma, and expand access to meaningful education, work and mentorship opportunities. 

The full order can be found here.

“Too many young men and boys are suffering in silence — disconnected from community, opportunity, and even their own families,” said Newsom. “This action is about turning that around. It’s about showing every young man that he matters and there’s a path for him of purpose, dignity, work, and real connection.”

“Women and men face different challenges — but there are systemic barriers we can take on together,” said First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom. “Whether it’s the shortage of male mental health providers, outdated ideas about care work, or boys falling through the cracks in school, this Executive Order is a step toward real solutions. Our young men and boys are facing a crisis of loneliness and social isolation that is showing up in their mental health, educational outcomes, future economic opportunities, and more. Raising healthy boys will take all of us—moms, dads, teachers, coaches, and mentors—working together to find new ways forward.”

The executive order helps address this crisis, directing state agencies to create a new focus on this issue and creating new pathways to help reconnect men and boys with the support, assistance, and help they need. 

Ending mental health stigma 

Lack of mental health support and gender stereotypes have perpetuated a culture where men and boys feel unable to ask for assistance or support, leading to higher rates of disconnection, suicide, drug use, crime, and lack of participation in the workforce. 

Depression is ranked as a leading cause of death among men, and mental health conditions often go untreated among men because they are far less likely to seek mental health treatment than women.

Newsom’s office said this crisis impacts everyone. Violence is focused both internally and externally, affecting all people in the community. Men are responsible for almost 80% of violent crime, and almost half of female homicide victims are killed by a current or former male intimate partner.

Although California consistently has one of the lowest gun death rates in the nation, the toll remains too high – about 3,200 Californians lose their lives to gun violence each year, with suicides making up a significant share, especially among men. In California, men aged 15–44 die by suicide at 3 to 4 times the rate of women, often by firearms. 

Strengthening mental health support

The executive order directs the California Health and Human Services Agency, or CalHHS, to develop recommendations to address the suicide crisis among young men. 

The governor is also ordering CalHHS, with support from the Center for Data Insights and Innovation, to examine existing data on gender disparities to identify any gaps in service delivery and assess potential changes to address disparities.

Crisis of loneliness

Young men are more disconnected from school, work and relationships than ever before, with nearly one in four men under 30 years old reporting that they have no close friends, a five-fold increase since 1990, with higher rates of disconnection for young Black males. 

A lack of social connection is associated with increased risk of poor health, including mental health disorders, poverty, and even premature death. 

This disconnection has pulled men out of the workplace. Labor force participation among men without a college degree is currently at historic lows, with about one in nine men aged 25-54 neither working nor looking for work. 

The unemployment rate for men in California is also higher than the rate for women, and college enrollment and completion rates for men have dropped significantly over the past decade.

Pathways to work and education

The executive order aims to reconnect men and boys with pathways to enter education or the workforce, including through service opportunities. 

The governor is directing the Office of Service and Community Engagement, in consultation with the Office of the First Partner and the executive director of the State Board of Education, to identify opportunities for promoting and enhancing the participation of men and boys in service opportunities through California Volunteers. 

The order also will help improve opportunities for the full participation of men and boys as part of California Jobs First, the Master Plan for Career Education, the Children and Youth Behavioral Health Initiative, and the California Community Schools Partnership Program, which are being implemented by the Governor’s Office for Business and Economic Development, the Labor and Workforce Development Agency, the California Health and Human Services Agency, the Governor’s Office of Service and Community Engagement, and the California Department of Veterans Affairs, and in consultation with the Office of the First Partner and the Executive Director of the State Board of Education.

The order also helps address the lack of male role models in educational settings, by directing the executive director of the State Board of Education and requesting the California Department of Education and the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing to identify opportunities to improve recruitment of men as teachers and school counselors.

Ongoing funding for job training and apprenticeship programs

The governor’s announcement of the executive order comes alongside the new announcement of $20 million awarded through the California Apprenticeship Council Training Funds. This funding will go to support apprenticeship training in the building trades. 

Apprenticeship funding is a key component of the Governor’s Master Plan for Career Education, which focuses on creating different career pathways that do not necessarily rely on a four-year college degree. 

Apprenticeships in the building trades are a debt-free option and can lead to stable jobs with family-sustaining wages and help support the governor’s efforts to address this crisis.  

With California leading the way in apprenticeship programs nationwide, Gov. Newsom aims to serve 500,000 apprentices by 2029; 219,784 registered apprentices have been served thus far.  

At-risk young men may also be connected to the workforce through California’s Youth Employment Opportunity Program, which helps young people ages 15 to 25 who may be struggling with school or work. Advisors for the program are available across California.

In March 2025, EDD and the LWDA awarded approximately $1,700,000 of Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Governor's discretionary funds under the Opportunity Young Adult Evaluation and Technical Assistance Program. These funds support organizations who help young adults reach educational and employment goals.  

Ongoing initiatives

The Newsom administration is in the midst of implementing several initiatives that are directly responsive to addressing negative outcomes for men and boys, including:

California Jobs First, a statewide plan built with input from 13 regions to drive sustainable economic growth, innovation, and access to good-paying jobs over the next decade, paired with $125 million to support new projects and $92 million for new apprenticeship and job programs.

The Master Plan for Career Education, which focuses on strengthening career pathways, prioritizing hands-on learning and real-life skills, and advancing educational access and affordability and complements additional investments.

Mental Health for All, California’s plan to build a stronger and more equitable behavioral health system, with the goal to make sure every Californian — especially those who have struggled to get help like men and boys — can access high-quality mental health and substance use disorder treatment when and where they need it.  

Proposition 1, passed by the voters in 2024 to modernize the state’s behavioral health care delivery system and provide $6.4B in bond funds to build treatment facilities and housing.

The Children and Youth Behavioral Health Initiative, which invests billions of dollars to create a larger and more representative workforce supporting behavioral health for young people and improve coordination and integration across different settings delivering behavioral health care.

The California Community Schools Partnership Program, which is transforming more than 2000 public schools into community hubs that provide integrated educational, health, and mental health services to students and families through more than $4 billion in grants. 

California Volunteers, which is tasked with engaging Californians in service, volunteering, and civic action and operates the largest service force in the nation, in addition to facilitating volunteer and civic engagement opportunities across the state.

Parents don’t need to try harder – to ease parenting stress, forget self-reliance and look for ways to share the care

Modern parents experience many demands, with little support. Abraham Gonzalez Fernandez/Moment via Getty Images

I wrap up my workday and head for home, making a quick stop to grab the supplies my sixth grader needs for a project due this week and some ingredients for a quick dinner.

Once home, I check the sixth grader’s school website and discover a missing assignment. Bringing this up sparks a minor meltdown. I summon the emotional energy to help her calm down and problem-solve. My husband arrives home with our high schooler, who’s discouraged by something that happened at soccer practice. We’ll have to process that later.

Around the dinner table, we realize that both kids have sports practices Thursday, on opposite ends of town, at the same time as a mandatory parent meeting at school. And now I’m ready for my own meltdown.

On this particular evening, my family wasn’t navigating anything unique or especially catastrophic. Scenes like this play out nightly in homes across the United States. In fact, my family’s circumstances offer the protections of multiple forms of privilege. Certainly others have more difficult circumstances.

Why is it still so hard?

For a long time, I felt ashamed for being overwhelmed by parenthood. How do others seem to have it all together? Of course, the highlight reel of social media only fueled this comparison game. I often felt that I was falling short, missing some hack that others had found for not feeling constantly exhausted.

The reality is I’m far from alone in experiencing what social scientists term parenting stress. Defined as the negative psychological reaction to a mismatch between the demands of parenting and the resources available, parenting stress has become increasingly prevalent over the past five decades. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, nearly half of all parents in the U.S. said their stress was completely overwhelming on most days.

Stress like this has an impact: Parents who experience high levels of parenting stress have decreased mental health and feel less close with their children.

I began researching parental stress and well-being when, several years after becoming a parent, I left my job as a social worker and entered a Ph.D. program. Through this process, I learned something that changed my perspective entirely: Parents today experience such high levels of stress because people have never traditionally raised children in isolation. And yet, we are more isolated than ever.

It clicked: Parents don’t need to do more or try harder. We need connection. We don’t need more social media posts on the “top three ways to keep your family organized.” We need a paradigm shift.

small boy runs away from camera toward extended family at a party
In the age of the nuclear family, it’s common for multiple generations to come together only on special occasions. Maskot/DigitalVision via Getty Images

The myth of family self-reliance

Throughout human history, people primarily lived in multigenerational, multifamily arrangements. Out of necessity, our hunter-gatherer ancestors relied upon their clan-mates to help meet the needs of their families, including child-rearing. Research over time and across cultures suggests that parents are psychologically primed to raise children in community – not in isolated nuclear family units.

Anthropologists use the term alloparents – derived from the Greek “allo,” meaning “other” – to describe nonparent adults who provide care alongside that provided by parents.

Research suggests that alloparenting contributes to child well-being and even child survival in populations with high rates of child mortality. A 2021 study of a present-day foraging population in the Philippines found that alloparents provided an astounding three-quarters of the care for infants and an even greater proportion of the care for children ages 2 to 6.

In contrast, the ideal of the nuclear family is incredibly recent. It developed with industrialization, peaking in the 1950s and 1960s. Despite the significant changes in family structure – such as an increase in single-parent households – since that period, the paragon of the self-reliant nuclear family persists.

And yet, support from others is a key factor in family resilience. The familiar adage “It takes a village to raise a child” is, in fact, bolstered by social support research among parents in general, as well as those of children with special needs.

Parenting with collective care

Social support, while often viewed as a singular phenomenon, is actually a constellation of actions, each with its own unique function. Social scientists specify at least three types of support:

  • Tangible: Material or financial resources or assistance
  • Emotional: Expressions of care, empathy and love
  • Informational: Provision of information, advice or guidance

Different parenting challenges call for different types of support. When my husband and I realized we had three commitments in a single evening, we didn’t need advice on managing our family’s calendar; we needed someone to take our kid to practice – that’s tangible support. When my tween was blowing up over homework, I didn’t need someone to bring us dinner; I needed to remember what I learned from a book on parenting adolescent girls – that’s informational support.

To move away from the myth of family self-reliance and back toward an ideal of collective care would take a paradigm shift, requiring intervention at every level, from federal to state to family. A 2024 Surgeon General’s Advisory on parenting stress called it an urgent public health issue and provided recommendations for government leaders, service systems and communities. Systemic strategies like providing access to high-quality mental health care, expanding programs like Head Start that support parents and caregivers, and investing in social infrastructure like public libraries and parks could all help reduce parenting stress in the U.S.

three adults hold four toddlers on their laps outside
Finding other families at the same stage you’re in can be one way to fill out your village. VIJ/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Personal steps toward a paradigm shift

Parenting stress is not a problem that can be solved solely by the individuals experiencing it. But here are five ways you can start making the shift toward collective care in your own life:

  1. Take stock of your network. Assess not only in terms of the number of supporters, but what types of support they offer. Do you have plenty of people to talk to, but no one who would bring you a meal or give your kid a ride? Identify gaps and consider ways to round out your “village.”
  2. Start small. Introduce yourself to your retired neighbor. Sit next to another parent at your kid’s sporting event. Talk to the babysitter you regularly see at the playground. Supportive relationships don’t just happen; they are grown.
  3. Offer help to others. While it seems counterintuitive, people who give support to others experience greater well-being and even longevity compared with those who don’t. Helping others also creates the opportunity for reciprocity. Those you support may be more likely to return the favor in the future.
  4. Normalize asking for help and taking it when offered. For many people, asking for support is hard. It requires dropping the facade and letting people in on your struggles. However, people are often more willing to help than you might assume. Further, allowing others to help you gives them permission to voice their own needs in the future.
  5. Consider your caregiving expectations. The way others care for your children may not mirror your way entirely. Consider what are nonnegotiable practices for your family – such as limits on screen time – and what is worth loosening up on – like veggies at every meal – if it means you have more alloparents helping you out.

None of these suggestions are easy. They take time, vulnerability and courage. In our society of rugged individualism and nuclear family self-reliance, parenting through a lens of collective care is downright countercultural. But perhaps it’s closer to how we, as humans, have raised children throughout the millennia.The Conversation

Elizabeth Sharda, Associate Professor of Social Work, Hope College

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

Officials warn of Lake County residents’ information being given to Immigration and Customs Enforcement

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Access to the private information of millions of Californians and tens of thousands of Lake County residents who have used Medi-Cal and CalFresh has been given to the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, an action that also is affecting millions of other Americans.

On July 1, California Attorney General Rob Bonta led a multistate coalition to sue the Trump Administration over the transfer of the data.

“The Trump Administration has upended longstanding privacy protections with its decision to illegally share sensitive, personal health data with ICE. In doing so, it has created a culture of fear that will lead to fewer people seeking vital emergency medical care,” said Attorney General Bonta.

Bonta said California and 19 other states were headed to court “to prevent any further sharing of Medicaid data — and to ensure any of the data that’s already been shared is not used for immigration enforcement purposes.”

State and county officials said the data for the Medicaid program, created in 1965, has been strictly protected up until this point.

“In the seven decades since Congress enacted the Medicaid Act to provide medical assistance to vulnerable populations, federal law, policy, and practice has been clear: the personal healthcare data collected about beneficiaries of the program is confidential, to be shared only in certain narrow circumstances that benefit public health and the integrity of the Medicaid program itself,” Bonta’s office said in a July 1 statement.

As of January, 78.4 million people were enrolled in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program nationwide, Bonta’s office reported.

In a statement on the situation, Lake County Social Services explained that, to receive federal funding, California has always been required to share data gathered from the local county welfare department with the federal government.

Medi-Cal data must be shared with the federal Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services, or CMS, and CalFresh data must be shared with the federal United States Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Services, Social Services reported.

Social Services said this data has traditionally been treated with strict confidentiality, used only for program administration.

However, on June 13, CMS released Medicaid data to the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

The data CMS released to ICE included the names, Social Security numbers and home addresses of Medi-Cal recipients.  

The federal government claims it gave this data to DHS “to ensure that Medicaid benefits are reserved for individuals who are lawfully entitled to receive them.” But Bonta’s office said it is Congress that extended coverage and federal funds for emergency Medicaid to all individuals residing in the United States, regardless of immigration status.

Bonta’s office said that on June 13, California and other states learned through news reports that Health and Human Services has transferred en masse their state’s Medicaid data files, containing personal health records representing millions of individuals, to DHS. 

“Reports indicate that the federal government plans to create a sweeping database for ‘mass deportations’ and other large-scale immigration enforcement purposes,” the Attorney General’s Office reported.

Medicaid is known as Medi-Cal in California. California’s Medi-Cal program provides health care coverage for one out of every three Californians, including more than two million noncitizens, the Attorney General’s Office reported.

Non-citizens include green card holders, refugees, individuals who hold temporary protected status, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival recipients, and others. 

Not all noncitizens are eligible for federally funded Medi-Cal services, and so California uses state-only funds to provide a version of the Medi-Cal program to all eligible state residents, regardless of their immigration status, the Attorney General’s Office reported.

The lawsuit didn’t stop the Trump administration from continuing to move forward, with a July 17 Associated Press report stating that CMS signed an agreement with Homeland Security to allow ICE continued access to all Medicaid recipient’s data, nationwide.  

On the same day as the Associated Press report was published, Bonta came out with a statement, noting his alarm that the data sharing agreement came out after the lawsuit he is leading against the government.

“I’m deeply disturbed by the Trump Administration’s reckless and unprecedented weaponization of the private, sensitive data of Medicaid recipients,” said Bonta. “It is devastating to think that individuals may not seek essential medical care because they are afraid that if they do so, they may be targeted by this Administration. We sued President Trump and his lackeys after we received initial reports of this illegal data sharing earlier this month. Despite this, the Trump Administration appears to have entered into a new illegal data sharing agreement with ICE. We are moving quickly to secure a court order blocking the sharing of this data for immigration enforcement. The President’s efforts to pull personal, private, and unrelated health data to create a mass deportation machine cannot be allowed to continue.”

A hearing on the motion for a preliminary injunction filed against the Trump administration by California and the multistate coalition is scheduled for Aug. 7. 

The coalition is asking that the court find the Trump Administration’s actions arbitrary and capricious and rulemaking without proper procedure in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act, contrary to the Social Security Act, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, the Federal Information Security Modernization Act and Privacy Act, and in violation of the Spending Clause. 

They’re also asking the court to enjoin Health and Human Services from transferring personally identifiable Medicaid data to Homeland Security or any other federal agency and Homeland Security from using this data to conduct immigration enforcement.  

The impacts in Lake County

In Lake County, Medi-Cal is known as the Partnership Health Plan, said Social Services Director Rachael Dillman Parsons.

Dillman Parsons told Lake County News that as of June, 30,490 individuals were enrolled in Medi-Cal in Lake County. That’s roughly 45% of the Lake County population, which as of Jan. 1, the California Department of Finance reported that Lake County had a population of 67,254 residents.

She said that the specific information regarding how many or whose data was released by CMS to ICE was not available to her.

In Social Services’ statement on the situation, it noted, “Individuals will need to weigh their risk in continuing to receive, or applying for, needed benefits. Lake County Social Services cannot delete case records or prevent federal data sharing. We can no longer assure people that the information we gather will be used solely for program administration.”

Social Services said it encourages trusted partners to help individuals, especially immigrants, assess their personal risks and benefits of accessing human services programs in this environment.

The California Department of Social Services funds community organizations to provide certain resources for immigrants. A list can be found here.

“Experts anticipate that the chilling effect from this federal data sharing will create further strain on already limited food distribution resources and medical care, the impact of which will be felt community wide,” Social Services said.

“These are concerning times,” Dillman Parsons told Lake County News.

Other lawsuits push back on information usage

In May, the US Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Services, or FNS, released a notice about a new National Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, Information Database, which referenced a March executive order by President Trump called “Stopping Waste, Fraud, and Abuse by Eliminating Information Silos.”

The agency planned to use the data on SNAP applicants, recipients, and former recipients for a wide variety of purposes.  

“FNS will use the data it receives from processors to ensure program integrity, including by verifying the eligibility of benefit recipients. This is consistent with FNS’s statutory authority and the President’s Executive Order and will ensure Americans in need receive assistance, while at the same time safeguarding taxpayer dollars from abuse,” the agency said.

SNAP is known as CalFresh in California and is sometimes referred to as “EBT” since the benefits are loaded onto an Electronic Benefit Transfer, or EBT, card to be spent at grocery stores on food.  

Groups including Protect Democracy, Student Defense, the National Center for Law and Economic Justice and the Electronic Privacy Information Center on behalf of students, SNAP recipients, MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger and EPIC filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the plan.

As a result, by the start of June, the Trump administration backed off the plan, with senior U.S. Department of Agriculture official Shiela Corley giving a sworn declaration “that the agency has not collected any of the SNAP recipient data in question and will not proceed with its plan to do so without following laws intended to protect privacy and data security,” according to a Protect Democracy statement on the suit.

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. 

Russian earthquake triggers tsunami concerns along West Coast

The 8.8 earthquake that happened off the eastern coast of Russia on Tuesday, July 29, 2025, shown in blue, followed by a cluster of other smaller, but still significant, earthquakes. Image courtesy of the United States Geological Survey.


NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — A Tuesday afternoon earthquake off the Russian coast triggered a tsunami advisory for much of the West Coast, and a warning for the Hawaii Islands and a portion of the North Coast of California.

The United States Geological Survey said the 8.8-magnitude earthquake occurred just before 4:30 p.m. Pacific Time off the Kamchatka Peninsula on the eastern coast of Russia.

That initial quake was followed by dozens of quakes in the same area, some as large at 6.5 magnitude.

The quake’s 8.8-magnitude earned it a tie for the sixth-largest recorded earthquake, according to seismic historical records.

The National Tsunami Warning Center began issuing updates on the potential for a tsunami shortly after it occurred.

At around 10 p.m. Tuesday night, “a tsunami is occurring in the Pacific Ocean tonight,” the center posted on its Facebook page.

“This is the most significant event we've seen in some time. It is _not_ the same thing as recent alerts near California in December, or Alaska a few weeks ago,” the center said in its post.

At that time, a tsunami warning was in effect for the Western Aleutians and Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea, which later was downgraded to an advisory.

A warning was in effect for the Hawaiian Islands, and a stretch of the Northern California coast that included northern Humboldt County and southern Del Norte County. A tsunami advisory was in place for the rest of the West Coast.  

Late Tuesday, the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office said the Sonoma coast was under a tsunami warning until 3:30 a.m. 

The public was urged to stay out of coastal waters, off the beach, harbor docks and piers as strong currents and dangerous waves were expected. 

Tsunami start times for the North Coast were:

• Fort Bragg: 11:50 p.m. July 29.
• Crescent City: 11:50 p.m. July 29.
• Monterey: 12:15 a.m. July 30.
• San Francisco: 12:40 a.m. July 30.

The Sonoma County Sheriff’s office said tsunamis often arrive as a series of waves or surges which could be dangerous for many hours after the first wave arrives. The first tsunami wave or surge may not be the highest in the series. 

The forecast peak tsunami wave heights along much of the North Coast were expected to be less than one foot high.

The Del Norte Office of Emergency Services said late Tuesday that tsunami waves from 2.7 to 5 feet would begin to arrive shortly before midnight and may last for approximately 30 hours. 

In a late Tuesday night video, Eric Wier, Crescent City’s city manager, said the tsunami would not be like that of 1964. 

He said some city residents in an inundation area had been asked to evacuate. A temporary evacuation point was set up at the Veteran's Memorial Building in Crescent City.

Ryan Aylward of the National Weather Service said that when high tide arrives around 3 a.m., there could be waves that are higher than the normal high tide, with the surge into the 5 foot range. There is the possibility of some minor flooding close to the bay.

State Sen. Mike McGuire, who was on the video with Del Norte officials, noted that the worst case scenario could have been much worse.

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. 

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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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