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Lakeport protest pushes back on federal immigration actions

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 01 February 2026
Created: 01 February 2026

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Protesters gather at Museum Square in downtown Lakeport, California, on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. Photo by Elizabeth Larson/Lake County News. 

 

LAKEPORT, Calif. — Several hundred protestors came out on the last day of January to protest the immigration crackdown that’s underway nationwide and has culminated over the past month in the shooting deaths of two people in Minneapolis.

The “ICE Out for Good” took place from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday at Museum Square in downtown Lakeport.

The protest was one among many that have taken place across the United States in recent days in response to the actions of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

The event was organized to allow community members to stand in solidarity with Minnesota. That state has been the epicenter of federal immigration action, with a heightened presence in Minneapolis, where Renee Good, a mother of three, was killed by ICE on Jan. 7 and Alex Pretti, a Department of Veteran Affairs nurse, on Jan. 24 by Border Patrol.

The scene in Lakeport on Saturday afternoon was much like it has been at the series of protests in Museum Square over the past year.

There were several hundred attendees — organizers estimated just over 600 people took part — lining a three-block area of Main Street, cheering as passing drivers honked their horns.

Also at the event was Luca Moretti, Congressman Mike Thompson’s Lake County field representative.

Protestors who ranged across generations, from teens to seniors, carried signs with a variety of slogans that called for Donald Trump’s impeachment, conviction and removal from the presidency. Signs read “Make America Sane Again: Fight Fascism”; “Impeach Krasnov”; “Abolish ICE now”; “A Woman’s Place is in the Resistance”; “No Kings, No Oligarchs”; “Defend Democracy”; and “ICE is Un-American, Non-Christian,” among others.

There also were signs with Good’s name and with Pretti’s. One such sign said, “Pretti good time for Congress to stop this destruction of the United States.”

The day was peaceful with one exception reported by organizers.

A group of high school girls who were standing on the corner of Third and Main streets were accosted by an aggressive male subject. The individual, described as a middle aged man, pulled up in a pickup and yelled at the teens, “I hope all of you get raped and murdered!”

That subject has so far not been identified.

At the event it was announced that more protests are expected to take place in late February and March.

 

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A sign at the “ICE Out for Good” protest in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. Photo by Elizabeth Larson/Lake County News.

 

Protests take place in other parts of the region

Congressman Mike Thompson reported on Saturday that over the past week he’d been joined by over 1,500 community members in Napa and Woodland to protest ICE’s actions in Minneapolis and call for action.

Thompson was one of the first members of Congress to sign onto articles of impeachment against Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem earlier this month, leads legislation to prohibit agents from wearing masks and will be introducing legislation to mandate agents wear body cameras.

Thompson also voted no on funding for ICE and Border Patrol operations.

In Woodland, Thompson hosted a “Fire Noem” Day of Action on Wednesday at Heritage Plaza. More than 400 community members gathered to amplify calls for accountability in immigration enforcement and to call on Congress to act to impeach Noem. Thompson was joined by Yolo County Supervisors Angel Barajas, Lucas Frerichs, Sheila Allen and Mary Vixie Sandy; Woodland Mayor Pro Tempore Mayra Vega; and Jake Whitaker, chair of the Yolo County Democratic Party and former Woodland School Board member.

In Napa, Thompson led a “Stop ICE” Day of Action on Friday at Veterans Memorial Park, where more than 1,000 community members and local leaders gathered to express concern about aggressive federal immigration tactics. Participating leaders included State Senator Christopher Cabaldon, Napa City Councilmember Bernie Narvaez, Indivisible Napa’s Pat Reynes, Napa Valley Together’s Jenny Ocon, Rabbi Niles Goldstein of Congregation Beth Shalom and 13 year-old Edna Velazquez from Robert Louis Stevenson Middle School in St. Helena.

Thompson has hosted several “Know Your Rights” events over the past year for business owners, employees and community members to help people understand what they should do if ICE comes to their home or business.

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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A sign at the “ICE Out for Good” protest in Lakeport, California, on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. Photo by Elizabeth Larson/Lake County News.

 

Testing continues in expanded sewer spill area

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 01 February 2026
Created: 01 February 2026

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — More water well tests were completed on Saturday as the recovery effort for a massive sewage spill in Clearlake continues.

The spill began three weeks ago today, when a 16-inch force main operated by the Lake County Sanitation District ruptured on Robin Lane, releasing nearly three millions gallons over a 38-hour period.

The incident led to some temporary relocations for residents who rely on well water, as dozens of wells were found to have been contaminated by the sewage.

For the past week, a joint command composed of the city of Clearlake and the Lake County Sheriff’s Office of Emergency Services has moved the incident into a recovery operation.

An updated map released on Friday showed nine impact zones totaling an estimated 550 acres — an increase of about 250 acres — on the northern end of Clearlake.

The expanded area includes three new incident zones covering properties north of Burns Valley Road that are east of Reid Lane and south of Pond Road, and north of Olympic Drive that are east of Old Highway 53, and west of Highway 53.

Officials have advised residents within the expanded area not to use their well water until water sampling and laboratory testing have been completed and results confirm the water is safe for use.

Groundwater testing is ongoing as officials seek to clear property owners to be able to safely use their wells again.

On Saturday, the incident management team reported that 18 more water samples had been completed, bringing the total to 394 for 151 sites tested.

The number of water tanks installed for residents remained at 25 on Saturday — 18 of them by the incident management team and seven through a program administered by Lake County Social Services.

For residents without water, the mobile laundry and hygiene service trailer is located at 2485 Old Highway 53 in Clearlake.

Residents with questions may contact Lake County Environmental Health at 707-263-1164 for well testing and the city of Clearlake at 707-994-8201 for general information.

Updates, maps, testing information and available resources are available here or at Response.LakeCountyCA.gov.

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.

Helping Paws: New canine friends

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 01 February 2026
Created: 01 February 2026

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control is ready to send you home with a new canine friend this week.

The dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of cattle dog, corgi, German shepherd, husky, Labrador retriever, mastiff, pit bull terrier, Rottweiler and shepherd.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

Those animals shown on this page at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

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.

 

 

 

 

 

US exit from the World Health Organization marks a new era in global health policy – here’s what the US, and world, will lose

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Written by: Jordan Miller, Arizona State University
Published: 01 February 2026
Created: 01 February 2026

The U.S.-WHO collaboration has been critical in the country’s response to mpox, shown here, as well as Ebola, Marburg, flu and COVID-19. Uma Shankar sharma/Moment via Getty Images

The U.S. departure from the World Health Organization became official in late January 2026, according to the Trump administration – a year after President Donald Trump signed an executive order on inauguration day of his second term declaring that he was doing so. He first stated his intention to do so during his first term in 2020, early in the COVID-19 pandemic.

The U.S. severing its ties with the WHO will cause ripple effects that linger for years to come, with widespread implications for public health. The Conversation asked Jordan Miller, a public health professor at Arizona State University, to explain what the U.S. departure means in the short and long term.

Why is the US leaving the WHO?

The Trump administration says it’s unfair that the U.S. contributes more than other nations and cites this as the main reason for leaving. The White House’s official announcement gives the example of China, which – despite having a population three times the size of the U.S. – contributes 90% less than the U.S. does to the WHO.

The Trump administration has also claimed that the WHO’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic was botched and that it lacked accountability and transparency.

The WHO has pushed back on these claims, defending its pandemic response, which recommended masking and physical distancing.

The U.S. does provide a disproportionate amount of funding to the WHO. In 2023, for example, U.S. contributions almost tripled that of the European Commission’s and were roughly 50% more than the second highest donor, Germany. But health experts point out that preventing and responding quickly to public health challenges is far less expensive than dealing with those problems once they’ve taken root and spread.

However, the withdrawal process is complicated, despite the U.S. assertion that it is final. Most countries do not have the ability to withdraw, as that is the way the original agreement to join the WHO was designed. But the U.S. inserted a clause into its agreement with the WHO when it agreed to join, stipulating that the U.S. would have the ability to withdraw, as long as it provided a one-year notice and paid all remaining dues. Though the U.S. gave its notice when Trump took office a year ago, it still owes the WHO about US$260 million in fees for 2024-25. There are complicated questions of international law that remain.

The U.S. has been a dominant force in the WHO, and its absence will have direct and lasting impacts on health systems in the U.S. and other countries.

What does US withdrawal from the WHO mean in the short term?

In short, the U.S. withdrawal weakens public health abroad and at home. The WHO’s priorities include stopping the spread of infectious diseases, stemming antimicrobial resistance, mitigating natural disasters, providing medication and health services to those who need it, and even preventing chronic diseases. So public health challenges, such as infectious diseases, have to be approached at scale because experience shows that coordination across borders is important for success.

The U.S. has been the largest single funder of the WHO, with contributions in the hundreds of millions of dollars annually over the past decade, so its withdrawal will have immediate operational impacts, limiting the WHO’s ability to continue established programs.

As a result of losing such a significant share of its funding, the WHO announced in a recent memo to staff that it plans to cut roughly 2,300 jobs – a quarter of its workforce – by summer 2026. It also plans to downsize 10 of its divisions to four.

In addition to a long history of funding, U.S. experts have worked closely with the WHO to address public health challenges. Successes stemming from this partnership include effectively responding to several Ebola outbreaks, addressing mpox around the world and the Marburg virus outbreak in Rwanda and Ethiopia. Both the Marburg and Ebola viruses have a 50% fatality rate, on average, so containing these diseases before they reached pandemic-level spread was critically important.

The Infectious Diseases Society of America issued a statement in January 2026 describing the move as “a shortsighted and misguided abandonment of our global health commitments,” noting that “global cooperation and communication are critical to keep our own citizens protected because germs do not respect borders.”

Pink and purple-stained light micrograph image of liver cells infected with Ebola virus.
The US has been instrumental in the response to major Ebola outbreaks through its involvement with the WHO. Shown here, Ebola-infected liver cells. Callista Images/Connect Images via Getty Images

What are the longer-term impacts of US withdrawal?

By withdrawing from the WHO, the U.S. will no longer participate in the organization’s Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System, which has been in operation since 1952. This will seriously compromise the U.S.’s ability to plan and manufacture vaccines to match the predicted flu strains for each coming year.

Annual flu vaccines for the U.S. and globally are developed a year in advance using data that is collected around the world and then analyzed by an international team of experts to predict which strains are likely to be most widespread in the next year. The WHO convenes expert panels twice per year and then makes recommendations on which flu strains to include in each year’s vaccine manufacturing formulation.

While manufacturers will likely still be able to obtain information regarding the WHO’s conclusions, the U.S. will not contribute data in the same way, and American experts will no longer have a role in the process of data analysis. This could lead to problematic differences between WHO recommendations and those coming from U.S. authorities.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that each year in the U.S. millions of people get the flu, hundreds of thousands of Americans are hospitalized and tens of thousands die as a result of influenza. Diminishing the country’s ability to prepare in advance through flu shots will likely mean more hospitalizations and more deaths as a result of the flu.

This is just one example of many of how the U.S.’s departure will affect the country’s readiness to respond to disease threats.

Additionally, the reputational damage done by the U.S. departure cannot be overstated. The U.S. has developed its position as an international leader in public health over many decades as the largest developer and implementer of global health programs.

I believe surrendering this position will diminish the United States’ ability to influence public health strategies internationally, and that is important because global health affects health in the U.S. It will also make it harder to shape a multinational response in the event of another public health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic.

Public health and policy experts predict that China will use this opportunity to strengthen its position and its global influence, stepping into the power vacuum the U.S. creates by withdrawing. China has pledged an additional US$500 million in support of the WHO over the next five years.

As a member of the WHO, the United States has had ready access to a vast amount of data collected by the WHO and its members. While most data the WHO obtains is ultimately made available to the public, member nations have greater access to detailed information about collection methods and gain access sooner, as new threats are emerging.

Delays in access to data could hamstring the country’s ability to respond in the event of the next infectious disease outbreak.

Could the US return under a new president?

In short, yes. The WHO has clearly signaled its desire to continue to engage with the U.S., saying it “regrets the U.S. decision to withdraw” and hopes the U.S. will reconsider its decision to leave.

In the meantime, individual states have the opportunity to participate. In late January, California announced it will join the WHO’s Global Outbreak Alert & Response Network, which is open to a broader array of participants than just WHO member nations. California was also a founding member of the West Coast Health Alliance, which now includes 14 U.S. states that have agreed to work together to address public health challenges.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has also launched an initiative designed to improve public health infrastructure and build trust. He enlisted national public health leaders for this effort, including former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention leaders Susan Monarez and Deb Houry, as well as Katelyn Jetelina, who became well known as Your Local Epidemiologist during the COVID-19 pandemic.

I think we will continue to see innovative efforts like these emerging, as political and public health leaders work to fill the vacuum being created by the Trump administration’s disinvestment in public health.The Conversation

Jordan Miller, Teaching Professor of Public Health, Arizona State University

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

Space News: NASA’s Artemis II crewed mission to the Moon shows how US space strategy has changed since Apollo – and contrasts with China’s closed program

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Written by: Michelle L.D. Hanlon, University of Mississippi
Published: 01 February 2026
Created: 01 February 2026

As part of the Artemis II mission, humans will fly around the Moon for the first time in decades. Roberto Moiola/Sysaworld via Getty Images

When Apollo 13 looped around the Moon in April 1970, more than 40 million people around the world watched the United States recover from a potential catastrophe. An oxygen tank explosion turned a planned landing into an urgent exercise in problem-solving, and the three astronauts on board used the Moon’s gravity to sling themselves safely home. It was a moment of extraordinary human drama, and a revealing geopolitical one.

The Cold War space race was a two-player contest. The Soviet Union and the United States operated in parallel, rarely cooperating, but clearly measuring themselves against one another. By 1970, the United States had already landed on the Moon, and competition centered on demonstrating technological capability, political and economic superiority and national prestige. As Apollo 13 showed, even missions that did not go as planned could reinforce a country’s leadership if they were managed effectively.

More than half a century later, NASA’s Artemis II mission will send humans around the Moon again in early 2026, this time deliberately. But the strategy going into Artemis II looks very different from that of 1970. The United States is no longer competing against a single rival in a largely symbolic race.

An artist's impression of a spacecraft flying over the surface of the Moon.
The crew will make a single flyby of the Moon in an Orion capsule, shown in this illustration. NASA, CC BY-NC

As a professor of air and space law, I research questions of governance and conflict avoidance beyond Earth. From a space law perspective, sustained human activity on the Moon and beyond depends on shared expectations about safety and responsible behavior. In practice, the countries that show up, operate repeatedly and demonstrate how activity on the lunar surface and in outer space can be carried out over time shape these expectations.

Artemis II matters not as nostalgia or merely a technical test flight. It is a strategic signal that the United States intends to compete in a different kind of Moon race, one defined less by singular achievements and more by sustained presence, partnerships and the ability to shape how activity on the Moon is conducted.

From a 2-player race to a crowded field

Today, more countries are competing to land on the Moon than ever before, with China emerging as a pacing competitor. While national prestige remains a factor, the stakes now extend well beyond flags and firsts.

Governments remain central actors in the race to the Moon, but they no longer operate alone. Commercial companies design and operate spacecraft, and international partnerships shape missions from the start.

China, in particular, has developed a lunar program that is deliberate, well-resourced and focused on establishing a long-term presence, including plans for a research station. Its robotic missions have landed on the Moon’s far side and returned samples to Earth, and Beijing has announced plans for a crewed landing by 2030. Together, these steps reflect a program built on incremental capability rather than symbolic milestones.

Why Artemis II matters without landing

Artemis II, scheduled to launch in February 2026, will not land on the Moon. Its four-person crew will loop around the Moon’s far side, test life-support and navigation systems, and return to Earth. This mission may appear modest. Strategically, however, crewed missions carry a different weight than robotic missions.

A diagram showing the trajectory of Artemis II and major milestones, from jettisoning its rocket boosters to the crew capsule's separation.
Artemis II’s four-person crew will circle around the Earth and the Moon. NASA

Sending people beyond low Earth orbit requires sustained political commitment to spaceflight, funding stability and systems reliable enough that sovereign and commercial partners can align their own plans around them.

Artemis II also serves as a bridge to Artemis III, the mission where NASA plans to land astronauts near the Moon’s south pole, currently targeted for 2028. A credible, near-term human return signals that the U.S. is moving beyond experimentation and toward a sustained presence.

The Artemis II mission, detailed from launch to splashdown.

2 different models for going back to the Moon

The contrast between U.S. and Chinese lunar strategies is increasingly clear.

China’s program is centrally directed and tightly controlled by the state. Its partnerships are selective, and it has released few details about how activities on the Moon would be coordinated with other countries or commercial actors.

The U.S. approach, by contrast, is intentionally open. The Artemis program is designed so partners, both other countries and companies, can operate within a shared framework for exploration, resource use and surface activity.

This openness reflects a strategic choice. Coalitions among countries and companies expand their capabilities and shape expectations about how activities such as landing, operating surface equipment and using local resources are conducted.

When vague rules start to matter

International space law already contains a framework relevant to this emerging competition. Article IX of the 1967 outer space treaty requires countries to conduct their activities with “due regard” for the interests of others and to avoid harmful interference. In simple terms, this means countries are expected to avoid actions that would disrupt or impede the activities of others.

For decades, this obligation remained largely theoretical. On Earth, however, similarly open-ended rules, particularly in maritime contexts, created international conflicts as traffic on shipping lanes, resource extraction and military activity increased. Disputes intensified as some states asserted claims that extended beyond what international law recognized.

The Moon is now approaching a comparable phase.

As more actors converge on resource-rich regions, particularly near the lunar south pole, due regard becomes an immediate operational question rather than a theoretical future issue. How it is interpreted – whether it means simply staying out of each other’s way or actively coordinating activities – will shape who can operate where, and under what conditions.

Washington is naming the race − without panic

During his second Senate Commerce Committee confirmation hearing, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman was asked directly about competition with China in lunar exploration. He emphasized the importance of keeping U.S. space efforts on track over time, linking the success of the Artemis program to long-term American leadership in space.

A similar perspective appears in a recent U.S. government assessment, the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission’s 2025 annual report to Congress. Chapter 7 addresses space as a domain of strategic competition, highlighting China’s growing capabilities. The report frames human spaceflight and deep-space infrastructure – including spacecraft, lunar bases and supporting technologies – as part of broader strategic efforts. It emphasizes growing a human space program over time, rather than changing course in response to individual setbacks or the accomplishments of other countries.

Three people sitting at a panel table and one speaking at a podium with the NASA logo. Projected behind them is a slide reading Artemis Accords, with the flags of several countries.
The U.S. approach to spaceflight is emphasizing international cooperation. Joel Kowsky/NASA via Getty Images

Recent U.S. policy reflects this emphasis on continuity. A new executive order affirms federal support for sustained lunar operations, as well as commercial participation and coordination across agencies. Rather than treating the Moon as a short-term challenge, the order anticipates long-term activity where clear rules, partnerships and predictability matter.

Artemis II aligns with this posture as one step in the U.S.’s plans for sustained activity on the Moon.

A different kind of test

As Artemis II heads toward the Moon, China will also continue to advance its lunar ambitions, and competition will shape the pace and manner of activity around the Moon. But competition alone does not determine leadership. In my view, leadership emerges when a country demonstrates that its approach reduces uncertainty, supports cooperation and translates ambition into a set of stable operating practices.

Artemis II will not settle the future of the Moon. It does, however, illustrate the American model of space activity built on coalitions, transparency and shared expectations. If sustained, that model could influence how the next era of lunar, and eventually Martian, exploration unfolds.The Conversation

Michelle L.D. Hanlon, Professor of Air and Space Law, University of Mississippi

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

Clearlake sewer spill area expanded; more water tanks installed

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 31 January 2026
Created: 31 January 2026
A new map of the expanded 2026 Robin Lake Sewer Spill impact area issued on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. 



LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Officials on Friday said they have expanded the incident area for a massive sewer spill in the northern part of Clearlake as a precautionary measure.

Sunday will mark three weeks since a Lake County Sanitation District-owned force main rupture triggered the Robin Lane sewer spill, which released nearly three million gallons of raw sewage into streets and across private properties.

On Monday, the city of Clearlake began managing the recovery phase of the incident in unified command with the Lake County Sheriff’s Office of Emergency Services.

During the week, officials expanded the number of impacted properties from 58 to 200.

By Friday, the unified command said that, based on continued evaluation of groundwater conditions related to the spill, the incident area was expanded as a precautionary measure to ensure the protection of public health.

When the sewer line break was first identified, officials said an initial impact area was established based on the information available at that time, including where groundwater from the shallow aquifer was believed to have the potential to be affected. 

“After further review and consultation with a hydrogeologist, it was determined that groundwater in the area may have moved more laterally than originally anticipated,” the Friday unified command report said.

As a result, unified command expanded the incident area to include additional residents who rely on private wells drawing from the shallow aquifer. 

Three new incident zones were created for properties north of Burns Valley Road that are east of Reid Lane and south of Pond Road, which comprise the new Zone A3, and properties north of Olympic Drive that are east of Old Highway 53, and west of Highway 53, which are included in zones C3 and C4.

Those zone changes — which bring the total number of zones to nine — resulted in the new incident area growing from about 297 acres to an estimated 550 acres, based on an analysis of the city map released by city and county officials.

“Inclusion in the expanded area does not mean contamination has been confirmed at a property. The expansion is intended to ensure that all areas that could potentially be affected receive appropriate guidance, testing and support,” officials said.

Following the recommendation of Public Health Officer Dr. Robert Bernstein, residents within the expanded area are advised not to use their well water until water sampling and laboratory testing have been completed and results confirm the water is safe for use, according to the Friday report.

Officials said Friday that additional groundwater testing and evaluation will continue as part of the ongoing response, and residents will be notified directly about testing and next steps as more information becomes available.

Friday’s recovery update also included new figures for testing, with 151 sites tested and 376 water samples completed.

Additionally, 25 water tanks have now been installed, 18 of them by the incident management team and seven through a program administered by Lake County Social Services.

For residents without water, the mobile laundry and hygiene service trailer is located at 2485 Old Highway 53 in Clearlake.

Residents with questions may contact Lake County Environmental Health at 707-263-1164 for well testing and the city of Clearlake at 707-994-8201 for general information. 

Updates, maps, testing information and available resources are available at the city of Clearlake's website or Response.LakeCountyCA.gov. 

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. 

Authorities identify subjects killed in Jan. 23 crashes

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 31 January 2026
Created: 31 January 2026

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Authorities have released the names of two people who died in separate crashes last week.

The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said Richard Orvis Evens, 63, Kelseyville died in a vehicle crash on Big Valley Road in Kelseyville and Thalia Inez Ugaz, 23, Stockton was hit and killed by a vehicle while crossing Highway 29 in Nice on Friday, Jan. 23.

The two crashes occurred two hours apart.

At 5:25 p.m. Jan. 23, the California Highway Patrol’s Ukiah Dispatch Center broadcast a call of a solo vehicle crash on Big Valley Road east of Renfro Drive, the CHP reported.

Responding units determined Evens was driving a gray Honda CR-V west on Big Valley Road when, for unknown reasons, he failed to negotiate the curve of the roadway. 

The CHP said Evens drove the Honda off the road and the front of the Honda crashed into a ditch south of Big Valley Road. 

The Honda cartwheeled multiple times and came to rest on its wheels south of Big Valley Road and east of Renfro Drive facing an easterly direction, the CHP said.

The CHP said preliminary evidence suggests Evens was not wearing a seatbelt during the crash. 

He was pronounced dead at the scene, the CHP said.

The CHP said Friday that it remains unknown if drugs and/or alcohol were factors in the crash.

Just two hours after the Evens crash, the CHP responded to a call for a pedestrian hit by a vehicle on Highway 20, west of Howard Avenue in Nice.

Ugaz was found lying in the roadway, unresponsive. A CHP officer administered aid by Ugaz died of her injuries at the scene, the CHP said.

The CHP said the preliminary investigation showed that Ugaz was crossing Highway 20 from south to north, within a crosswalk at Howard Avenue, when she was hit by a gray 2012 Honda Ridgeline being driven westbound on Highway 20 by Brannon Keller, 64, of Clearlake.

Keller was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol and was released from the scene, while the CHP said it was not yet known if Ugaz was under the influence of any substance when the crash occurred.

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. 

California Commission on the Status of Women and Girls launches 2026 Girls Agenda

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Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 31 January 2026
Created: 31 January 2026

The California Commission on the Status of Women and Girls, or CCSWG, announced the release of the 2026 Girls Agenda, a comprehensive statewide policy roadmap created by the commission’s Youth Advisory Council.

Developed by 17 youth commissioners representing communities across California, the Girls Agenda outlines urgent priorities in education and workforce development, health and access, and safety and prevention. Each section is grounded in current data, lived experience and the realities girls face every day.

“The Girls Agenda is more than a report; it is a call to action,” said Chair of the CCSWG Youth Advisory Council Nicole Kim. “Girls are navigating challenges from food insecurity and mental health struggles to inequitable access to STEM education and unsafe environments. This agenda reflects our vision for a California where every girl can grow up safe, healthy, and able to pursue the education and opportunities that shape her future.”

The Girls Agenda highlights the systemic barriers that continue to affect the lives of girls statewide, including the high cost of childcare, underrepresentation in STEM fields, rising rates of depression among teen girls, food insecurity, menstrual inequity, and persistent threats to safety. 

The Girls Agenda also identifies gaps in existing policy implementation, such as uneven enforcement of menstrual equity laws and limited access to mental health resources in rural and low-income communities.

“This work is essential because the challenges facing girls today are complex and interconnected,” said Chair of the CCSWG Dr. Rita Gallardo Good. “Girls are sharing their needs with us, and The Girls Agenda ensures that their voices will guide our policy priorities. By uplifting girls’ voices, we strengthen the future of every community in California.”

Key recommendations in The Girls Agenda include:

• Expanding access to computer science and STEM courses;
• Strengthening childcare support for teen parents;
• Improving nutrition and eating disorder education in schools;
• Enforcing menstrual equity laws;
• Increasing mental health resources; and
• Enhancing Title IX protections and violence prevention education.

The Girls Agenda also calls for youth-centered approaches to digital safety, reproductive health access, and teen dating violence prevention.

“Our Youth Advisory Council has done extraordinary work,” said Executive Director of the CCSWG Darcy Totten. “Their leadership, insight, and honesty have shaped a powerful blueprint for change. The Girls Agenda is a reminder that when we listen to girls, we can help them create policies that reflect their lived realities and support our collective future. This effort continues the Commission’s commitment to ensuring girls’ voices remain central to statewide decision-making and that those most impacted by policy have a seat at the table to help design it.”

The commission will use The Girls Agenda to guide its policy advocacy and programming throughout 2026 and will partner with state agencies, legislators and community organizations to advance the recommendations.

The California Commission on the Status of Women and Girls recognizes that youth aren’t just the leaders of tomorrow — they’re powerful changemakers today. 

The commission’s Youth Advisory Council provides young Californians (ages 14–20) with a meaningful platform to engage with the commission’s legislative work and help shape and elevate policies that impact their lives. 

Through this council, youth connect with other youth across the state, develop advocacy and leadership skills, obtain hands-on experience with California’s policy process, participate in mentorship, and have transformative conversations about the needs of our state’s young people.  

For more than 50 years, the California Commission on the Status of Women and Girls has identified and worked to eliminate inequities in state laws, practices, and conditions that affect California’s women and girls. Established as a state agency with 17 appointed commissioners in 1965, the Commission regularly assesses gender equity in health, safety, employment, education, and equal representation in the military, and the media. The Commission provides leadership through research, policy and program development, education, outreach and collaboration, advocacy, and strategic partnerships. Learn more at www.women.ca.gov. 

Space News: Rural areas have darker skies but fewer resources for students interested in astronomy – telescopes in schools can help

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Written by: Emma Marcucci, Smithsonian Institution
Published: 31 January 2026
Created: 31 January 2026

Observing the night sky can get kids interested in astronomy and STEM careers. Jeremy Thomas/Unsplash

The night sky has long sparked wonder and curiosity. Early civilizations studied the stars and tracked celestial events, predicted eclipses and used their observations to construct calendars, develop maps and formulate religious rituals.

Scholars widely agree that astronomy is a gateway science – that it inspires a core human interest in science among people of all ages, from senior citizens to schoolchildren. Helping young people tap into their excitement about the night sky helps them build confidence and opens career pathways they may not have considered before.

Yet today the night sky is often hidden from view. Almost all Americans live under light-polluted skies, and only 1 in 5 people in North America can see the Milky Way. When people live in areas where the night sky is clearer, they tend to express a greater wonder about the universe. Altogether, this means communities with less light pollution have great potential to educate the next generation of scientists.

Rural communities have some of the darkest skies in the country, making them perfect for stargazing. Yet while students in rural areas are in the optimal physical environment to be inspired by the night sky, they are the most in need of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM, education resources to support their interests and build the confidence they need to pursue careers in science.

Stargazing, finding constellations and watching meteor showers as a kid inspired my own sense of awe around the vastness of space and possibilities in our universe. Now, I’m the executive director of the Smithsonian’s Scientists Taking Astronomy to Rural Schools, or STARS, a new program led by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, part of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, that delivers telescopes and associated lesson plans to rural schools across the United States, free of charge. I’m working to share my excitement and wonder with students in rural areas.

The Sun, partially blocked by the Moon.
A solar eclipse, as viewed through a telescope. STARS

Why hands-on STEM learning matters

Students need direct exposure to STEM careers and hands-on experiences that help them learn the skills they will need to pursue these careers on their own. Hands-on activities ground new knowledge in ways that lectures and reading often cannot. Experiential opportunities connect what may be distant or abstract concepts to clear, tangible, real-world skills. This experiential learning improves students’ understanding of astronomy content and increases their motivation to learn.

Telescopes are important tools for astronomy that scientists use all the time. When students use telescopes as part of their learning, they are experiencing real techniques that scientists use. Using a telescope brings the viewer closer to fantastic celestial objects – allowing them to see galaxies, nebulas, planets, the Moon and the Sun, with solar filter protection, more closely or in greater detail.

A full Moon, tinged orange from sunlight, during a lunar eclipse.
Telescopes help students view astronomical objects, like the Moon, up close. STARS

There is nothing quite like seeing the soaring peaks and shadowed valleys of the Moon, or the distinct ring structure of Saturn, or endless other astronomical objects, through a telescope lens. This inspiration can motivate students to use their curiosity to explore the universe and see STEM careers as potential pathways.

Rural STEM education

The National Rural Education Association’s Why Rural Matters 2023 report estimates that there are 9.5 million students attending school in rural areas in the U.S., across more than 32,000 schools. This is more students than the student population of the 100 largest U.S. school districts combined.

While rural communities around the country all look different, they can face similar challenges: limited access to broadband internet, reduced state funding support and restricted geographical access to field trip opportunities, such as museums. Why Rural Matters found, on average, that 13.4% of rural households have a limited internet connection, and for some states this increases to 20%.

Each state distributes their education funding differently. The percentage allocated to rural schools varies from state to state, ranging from 5% to 50% of the total funding, which results in a wide range of money spent per student. Nonrural districts spend an average of US$500 more per student than rural districts. Looking state by state, however, this disparity climbs into the thousands of dollars.

Given their remote locations, rural areas host only 1 in 4 museums in the United States. Only 12% of children’s museums are in rural areas.

Educators may also consider STEM topics daunting. Many teachers do not feel adequately prepared or confident to introduce these topics to students. In other situations, there simply aren’t enough teachers to cover these topics. Shortages of STEM-focused teachers occur at some of the highest rates in rural districts, reducing rural students’ access to these subjects.

These reasons are why, through the STARS program, we give teachers access to a national community of practice that supports peer sharing and participation, alongside the telescope and science-aligned lesson plans. The lesson plans will be available online for anyone to use later this spring, whether or not they are part of the program.

STARS isn’t the only program connecting students with the night sky. Teachers, parents and students can also participate in national activities such as Observe the Moon Night and Globe at Night, and local activities, like their local amateur astronomy clubs.

A starry sky, silhouetted by trees.
Rural areas farther from cities tend to have darker skies, better for stargazing. Ryan Hutton/Unsplash

Opportunities to observe the sky with telescopes lead to an improvement in learning outcomes and STEM identity, and rural schools are uniquely situated to introduce students to the night sky. With a little extra support, through community events and educational programs, these schools have the opportunity to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers.The Conversation

Emma Marcucci, Executive Director of STARS, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Smithsonian Institution

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

Sewer spill response: More tanks installed, tests completed

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 30 January 2026
Created: 30 January 2026
A map of the 2026 Robin Lane Sewer Spill area divided into zones. Courtesy of the city of Clearlake.


LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Officials reported progress on Thursday in the continued water testing and tank placement in the neighborhoods impacted by a massive sewage spill that occurred earlier this month.

The city of Clearlake and the Lake County Office of Emergency Services, or Lake County OES, entered into unified command on Monday in managing the response to the Robin Lane sewer spill, which began on Jan. 11.

That management includes coordinating testing, resources and public updates as the recovery efforts continue, officials reported.

The spill, the result of a 16-inch force main rupture, lasted more than 38 hours and resulted in an estimated 2.9 million gallons of sewage being released, with impacts extending over a roughly 300-acre area. 

Public Health Officer Dr. Bob Bernstein urged residents of the spill area who rely on well water to temporarily relocate until their wells have been deemed safe following testing.

The Lake County Sanitation District, overseen by Lake County Special Districts, operates the sewer system that failed.

Initially, Special Districts was leading the response, but this week the management transitioned to the city and OES.

Officials told community members at a Wednesday night town hall that their goal is to get people back to normal as soon as possible.

The city said response efforts have moved from emergency containment to coordinated recovery and monitoring, with assessment and testing teams working across the six zones into which the spill area has been split.

“Sewer infrastructure has been stabilized, environmental assessments have been completed, and private well testing is ongoing across all zones, with each zone tested at least once and continued follow-up sampling underway,” the city reported.

The response has included providing potable water tanks, water deliveries, mobile laundry and hygiene services, and temporary shelter support to residents and animals, according to the Thursday report.

With the change in leadership, more information has become available this week, including an updated number of impacted properties — from the initial estimate of 58 to 200.

On Thursday, the city of Clearlake reported that the unified command’s teams had tested another 151 sites, bringing the total of water samples completed to 310.

To date, the total number of water tanks installed has risen to 19. Of those, 12 were installed by the incident team and the seven others were installed by a program overseen by Lake County Social Services.

The city of Clearlake’s website has a webpage dedicated to the incident. 

Additional information requests about the incident can be directed to Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Melissa Swanson, who also is acting as the incident’s public information officer, at 707-994-8201, Extension 106, or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Lake County Special Districts can be reached at 707-263-0119.

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. 

Solving Long COVID: How decades of HIV research paved the way

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Written by: Victoria Colliver
Published: 30 January 2026
Created: 30 January 2026
Long COVID patient Michael Dahl does a test as part of UCSF’s Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus (LIINC) project at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. Photo by Noah Berger.


UCSF’s rapid shift to uncover the virus’s hidden effects and seemingly unconnected symptoms put its researchers at the forefront of the field.

In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, UC San Francisco researchers were already seeing signs of lingering symptoms in some who had been infected. Importantly, this was when experts still viewed the illness as a transient respiratory virus and before long COVID even had a name, let alone a diagnosis.

Clinicians were hearing young, previously healthy people with no other medical problems talk about how they couldn’t shake the virus. They had bone-crushing fatigue, respiratory issues that wouldn’t go away, difficulty thinking, dizziness, and other problems that persisted well after the acute phase of the disease was over.

Many were in the prime of life but could no longer perform their jobs or function normally. Some had incapacitating symptoms and couldn’t sit upright for long periods of time or needed assistive devices to help them get around. A significant number faced skepticism from health care providers, and even their families and friends. Their symptoms were dismissed as anxiety or otherwise not taken seriously. But, at UCSF, clinicians and researchers took action and did so at a speed unmatched by any other institution.

They were able to quickly tap into decades of expertise and infrastructure built to study another complex virus, HIV. They used that advantage to pivot to COVID-19, the disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, and what eventually came to be known as long COVID.

“HIV taught us how chronic viral infections can affect the body long after the initial illness, and how important it is to involve patients in that research,” said Michael Peluso, MD, MHS, an infectious disease researcher and assistant professor of medicine at UCSF. “Applying those lessons to long COVID has helped us accelerate discovery and move closer to answers and treatments.”

In March 2020, UCSF established a program that allowed them to follow patients over years. As part of the Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus program, or LIINC, researchers recruited more than 1,700 participants, collected over 100,000 biospecimens, and produced many of the first and most consequential studies about the mechanisms of the disease. Within LIINC, which is directed by Peluso, researchers also built one of the premier clinical trial programs for long COVID in the world.

“By following individuals over time and studying them deeply, we began to uncover the biological drivers of long COVID, identify who was most at risk, and use that knowledge to inform better diagnostics, treatments, and prevention strategies,” Peluso said.

UCSF staff research associates work on UCSF’s Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus (LIINC) project. Photo by Noah Berger.

How HIV paved the way

Today, more than 20 million Americans have been diagnosed with long COVID. Yet still no diagnostic tests or therapeutics have been approved specifically for the debilitating condition, which is defined as persistent symptoms that include everything from shortness of breath to cognitive issues and cardiac problems that last more than three months after a COVID infection.

LIINC co-founder Steven Deeks, MD, started his career in the early 1990s at what is now the Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center (ZSFG). That was just as AIDS was becoming the leading cause of death for American men between the ages of 25 and 44, but treatments were limited to single-drug therapies.

By 1996, combinations of anti-HIV drugs were introduced that suppressed the virus and dramatically improved the outlook for people living with HIV. “In the early era of HIV, we tried single-drug therapies, but nothing worked. Two drugs, that didn’t really work. Three drugs – boom,” Deeks said. “That’s the way it worked for HIV, and that may be the way it works for long COVID. We’re certainly setting up our program to begin to look at these combinations.”

At the heart of the collaboration between ZSFG and UCSF on AIDS research was what became known as the San Francisco “model of care.” This is the integrated, team-based approach to working with public health and community organizations that led to HIV testing, clinical trials to evaluate treatments, and compassionate care. This included academic institutions, public health, community advocates, political leaders, and the biotechnology industry.

The same has been true of long COVID, where partnerships are starting to produce answers that researchers have been searching for.

About a year after opening, LIINC launched the world’s first long COVID tissue bank and discovered that pieces of the virus can linger in the tissue of patients for up to two years. LIINC shares blood and tissues with researchers around the world, is involved in dozens of collaborations to identify the abnormal biology driving the disease, and has conducted seven clinical trials to correct that biology.

“Our approach to clinical trials in long COVID is quite similar to our approach to cure HIV,” Peluso explained. “We identify the pathways that we think are driving the problem. Then we take an experimental medicine approach where we use novel therapeutics to really target those pathways to see if we can alter that biology that we think is at the core of this disease.”

The LIINC team was one of the few groups worldwide capable of shifting to study long COVID so quickly, according to Amy Proal, PhD, president of the PolyBio Research Foundation, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit that supports research into the root causes of chronic disease. Which is why PolyBio is LIINC’s primary funder, she said.

“They already knew that the SARS-CoV-2 virus might persist because of their history with HIV,” Proal said of UCSF’s researchers. “The things that they chose to do right from the beginning, like collect tissue and do certain kinds of imaging, could be targeted and very specific to what a virus does in a chronic capacity.”

That foresight allowed UCSF to immediately track long COVID patients overtime and led to a number of breakthrough findings.

No longer a mystery

While the biological mechanisms behind long COVID are still not fully understood, researchers say they’ve come a long way and are getting closer to finding treatments.

They’ve been able to detect immunologic differences between people with long COVID and without. They’ve discovered abnormal physiologic responses in cardiopulmonary and vascular function tests. They’ve also found inflammation in the tissues, as well as viral persistence in the gut, bone marrow, brain, and other deeper tissues.

“I don’t think that it is fair in 2026 to say that this disease is a mystery,” Peluso said. “I think we’ve made a lot of progress in understanding objectively what might be happening.”

Still, much of the difficulty in understanding long COVID is because it’s a complex syndrome with more than 200 documented symptoms affecting the respiratory, immune, nervous, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, and other systems.

Timothy Henrich, MD, a professor of medicine in UCSF’s Department of Experimental Medicine and a lead researcher at LIINC, runs a lab that expanded its focus from HIV to study the mechanisms by which viral infections lead to conditions like long COVID.  Not only did Henrich’s lab find viral persistence in the gut, bone marrow, brain, and other deeper tissues, they saw profound changes in immune responses and inflammation in these tissues at levels they didn’t see in standard blood tests.

One of the main things we learned is that SARS-CoV-2 is able to persist for a long period of time in various tissues across the body,” Henrich said. “This is really unusual and changed the paradigm of thinking about this as a chronic viral infection versus a transient, acute respiratory viral infection.”

To get a clearer understanding, researchers used noninvasive PET scans and revealed that T-cells, part of the immune system, were remaining active for prolonged periods of time, likely contributing to ongoing inflammation, which the immune system uses to fight illness, and other symptoms.

UCSF Clinical Research Coordinator Kathleen Bellon Pizarro (right) speaks with long COVID patient Hulda Brown (left) while working on UCSF’s Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus (LIINC) project. Photo by Noah Berger.

A commitment to finding answers

These discoveries get scientists closer to solutions, but researchers say the work needs more federal funding and investments from the pharmaceutical industry and private donors.

At a roundtable with long COVID experts convened last fall by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Peluso stressed the need to scale up the number of clinical trials and to implement a diagnostics program to identify who is most likely to benefit from the interventions. He emphasized that this would require investment on a faster timeline than is typical of federal programs.

“We saw for HIV how important it was in the ’90s to have pharmaceutical partners on board with developing drugs and investing tremendously ... in figuring out which treatments would work,” Peluso told the panel. “We need that level of commitment for long COVID.”

Peluso also emphasized the continued need to involve patients with the research. Hannah Davis, co-founder of the advocacy group, Patient-Led Research Collaborative, said UCSF’s researchers not only had the ability to immediately recognize that SARS-CoV-2 was causing this disorder, but they listened to patients and sought their participation in finding answers.

Davis believes LIINC’s work could eventually advance the understanding of other infection-associated chronic conditions, including myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), and persistent Lyme disease.

“One day soon, we’ll look back on LIINC as part of the groundswell that forever changed the understanding of conditions like long COVID,” Davis said. “The competence and credibility they have brought to the field has been rivaled by very few, and I’m forever grateful to the prescience, humility, and bold dedication they have shown in approaching this condition.”

Victoria Colliver writes for UCSF.

Clearlake Animal Control: ‘Chubbiana’ and the dogs

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 30 January 2026
Created: 30 January 2026
“Chubbiana.” Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — There are many dogs at Clearlake Animal Control — new ones and those that are still waiting — ready to go to their new homes.

The shelter has 56 adoptable dogs and puppies listed on its website.

This week’s dogs include “Chubbiana,” a female English bulldog mix. She has been spayed.

The shelter is located at 6820 Old Highway 53. It’s open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. 

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

This week’s adoptable dogs are featured below.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 


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