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News

Governor signs bills cracking down on retail crime and property theft; benefits may be limited for rural areas

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 17 August 2024
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday signed legislation to further crack down on property and retail crime in California, but Lake County’s district attorney said there may not be much of an impact for rural counties.

Newsom signed 10 new public safety laws to strengthen existing law enforcement tools and better protect Californians.

He said the new laws provide tougher criminal penalties for repeat offenders and additional tools for felony prosecutions.

“Let’s be clear, this is the most significant legislation to address property crime in modern California history. I thank the bipartisan group of lawmakers, our retail partners, and advocates for putting public safety over politics. While some try to take us back to ineffective and costly policies of the past, these new laws present a better way forward — making our communities safer and providing meaningful tools to help law enforcement arrest criminals and hold them accountable,” Newsom said in a statement on the action.

“A promise made is a promise kept — we’re taking bipartisan action to make our communities safer and stronger,” said Senate President pro Tempore Mike McGuire, whose district includes Lake County. “These 10 critical bills will crack down on retail theft, blunt local crime, and help our downtowns thrive for decades to come. Thanks to the partnership of Gov. Newsom, Speaker Rivas and the tireless work of our Senate and Assembly colleagues, California communities are getting the laws they need and rightfully deserve.”

Newsom’s office said the laws offer new tools to bolster ongoing efforts to hold criminals accountable for smash-and-grab robberies, property crime, retail theft and auto burglaries. They create stricter penalties for individuals involved in retail and property theft, mandate sentencing enhancements for large-scale operations, create new crimes, and impose enhanced felony charges and extended prison sentences.

While officials said California's crime rate remains near historic lows, last year the California Highway Patrol reported an annual 310% increase in proactive operations targeting organized retail crime, and special operations across the state to fight crime and improve public safety.

Since January, CHP’s Organized Retail Crime Task Force is on track to surpass the work in 2023, making 884 arrests and recovering more than a quarter of a million stolen goods valued at over $7.2 million, the Governor’s Office reported.

Lake County’s district attorney weighs in

Lake County District Attorney Susan Krones told Lake County News that she’s happy the Legislature is passing laws to crack down on organized retail theft offenses and the governor is signing them into law.

“However, for small rural counties like Lake we do not get very many cases where these new laws will make a difference,” Krones said. “These laws address organized retail theft with additional punishment when the theft is over $50,000 or more. That does nothing to detour the everyday thefts that we usually get in Lake County.”

Krones said none of these new laws make it a felony to steal property or money in the amount of $950 or less.

She said Proposition 36, the Homelessness, Drug Addiction and Theft Reduction Act that’s on the November ballot, “will make a huge difference to reduce retail thefts in Lake County.”

Krones explained that, if Prop 36 passes, an offender with two prior convictions for theft can be charged with a felony, regardless of the value of the stolen property.

“It is the same situation for drug possession,” Krones said. “ Currently it is a misdemeanor no matter how many priors a person has. Under Proposition 36 after two drug convictions the DA’s Office could charge a felony possession against the defendant.”

She added, “The goal is not to put people who are addicted to drugs in jail but to give them an incentive to seek help from programs to overcome their drug addiction.”

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

Local elections are less partisan because voters will cross party lines when issues hit close to home

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Written by: Edward L. Lascher Jr., California State University, Sacramento; Brian Adams, San Diego State University, and Danielle Martin, California State University, Sacramento
Published: 17 August 2024

 


Hand-wringing over American politics commonly focuses on the sharp and growing divisions between Democrats and Republicans.

Accumulating evidence indicates that voters are less likely than ever to split their ticket or vote for candidates from different parties in presidential or congressional races. Polarization over hot-button issues has spiked, as has animosity toward members of the opposite party.

Research also shows that state-level political contests have become more partisan. Results for state-level electoral contests more closely mirror presidential election results than they once did.

As political scientists who study local politics, we wanted to know: Does that same partisanship carry over to city, county and other local elections?

Controversy over partisanship in local elections

Scholars have devoted relatively little attention to local elections, but some academic research suggests that local races, too, have become increasingly partisan. That would indicate that the particulars of local contests – for example, debates over housing, homelessness and public works projects – matter less in voters’ decision-making than party affiliation.

There is reason to be skeptical of these claims.

For one, the vast majority of mayoral and city council elections across the U.S. are formally nonpartisan, as are most school board elections; voters may not even know the candidates’ party identification. And contentious local issues such as where to build affordable housing may not fall neatly along partisan lines.

Further, partisan control over local governments may not matter as much to voters as it does on a national level.

That’s what many voters said in our survey research, conducted in California in 2021 and cited in our 2024 article for Urban Affairs Review. Over 60% of respondents claimed that they cast their ballots based on the candidates’ policy positions, not party affiliation. This factor far exceeded such other voting shortcuts as relying on party endorsements or the candidates’ demographic characteristics.

It is possible, of course, that the voters we surveyed only claimed to prioritize the issues over the politics because doing so is more socially desirable; it makes them seem more conscientious and thoughtful.

So we decided to test their commitment to nonpartisanship in local elections.

A survey experiment

Presented with the choice, how would voters respond in an election where the opposing party candidate was closer to their policy views than the candidate identified as being from their own party? Would they actually defect to the opposing party for this particular race?

To answer these questions, our team of three researchers at two California State University campuses conducted a survey experiment, building on the findings in our 2021 survey. In the new survey, conducted in late 2022 with 905 partisan, registered voters in California, we presented respondents with a choice between a city council candidate from their party who held policy views contrary to their own and a candidate from the other party who shared their policy preferences.

The survey focused on two highly relevant local issues: homelessness and housing. These are problems that matter to voters, and prominent California politicians within the same party have taken differing stands on them.

In the experiment, some respondents had to choose between a politician from their own party who agreed with them on one of these issues and a candidate from the opposing party who did not; this was the control group. In our separate test group, voters had to choose between a candidate from their own party who disagreed with them on one of the issues and an opposing party candidate who aligned with their views on that issue.

The experimental approach allowed us to isolate differences on these two issues from other policy matters that may have influenced their vote.

Our findings

We found that, overall, voters tend to support candidates from their own party – even when an opposite party candidate was closer to their views on salient local issues. About 60% of both Democrats and Republicans supported their party’s candidate for city council in the face of policy disagreements.

That said, 4 in 10 respondents defected from their party in this vote, prioritizing local issues – or these two local issues, at least – over partisan affiliation.

Indeed, under certain circumstances, most voters ditched the candidate from their political party. Fully 70% of respondents who supported a law enforcement-centered approach to homelessness, such as dismantling the highly visible encampments that have cropped up across California, would back a city council candidate from the opposite party who wanted police to clear the tent cities.

Looking deeper into the patterns from our experimental data, we found that the strength of both party ties and policy views mattered. Weak partisans were more likely to defect than strong partisans. Voters were also more likely to cross party lines if they believed homelessness and housing were very important issues or if they had more extreme policy preferences.

Party ties: Convenient but not binding

Our research complicates the common wisdom that partisanship dominates American electoral decision-making.

It suggests that Republican candidates can win in predominantly Democratic localities, and vice versa. Voters may cross party lines for politicians who take an appealing stance on local issues of serious concern, which may require breaking with party orthodoxy. Nonpartisan ballots that obscure the candidates’ party affiliation may help nudge voters toward party defection.

The implications are significant. More than 500,000 elected officials – 96% of all elected officials in the U.S. – serve at the local level, sitting on city councils, county boards of supervisors, school boards, special districts and the like.

In local politics, it turns out, a candidate’s party ties may be more of a convenience for voters than an identification that earns great loyalty. Partisanship looks less like sticking to your local sports team even when it’s having a terrible season and more like shopping at the nearest supermarket until a better one moves in.The Conversation

Edward L. Lascher Jr., Professor, Public Policy and Administration, California State University, Sacramento; Brian Adams, Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University, and Danielle Martin, Associate Professor of Political Science, California State University, Sacramento

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

Clearlake Animal Control: Available puppies

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 17 August 2024
A 3-month-old male mixed breed puppy. Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — It’s puppy time at Clearlake Animal Control.

Among the 43 adoptable dogs available this week are several puppies.

A 3-month-old male mixed breed puppy. Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

The male mixed breed puppies are 3 months old, with short tan and white or black and white coats.

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

A 3-month-old male mixed breed puppy. Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

For more information, call the shelter at 707-762-6227, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., visit Clearlake Animal Control on Facebook or on the city’s website.

This week’s adoptable dogs are featured below.

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



Estate Planning: The inventory and appraisal of a decedent’s estate

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Written by: DENNIS FORDHAM
Published: 17 August 2024
Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The inventory and appraisal is the first milestone to be passed in settling a decedent’s estate.

An inventory and appraisal is relevant whether a decedent’s assets are held in the decedent’s name and/or held in the decedent’s living trust.

The inventory serves more than one purpose. Let us discuss the relevance and preparation of the inventory and appraisal when settling a decedent’s estate.

Prior to opening a possible probate it is necessary to know whether the total gross value of the assets in the decedent’s probate estate qualifies as a small estate — presently less than $184,500. If so, then no probate is required to transfer title to the decedent’s beneficiaries or heirs from the small estate.

In California, if a decedent’s estate owns real property, however, then an inventory and appraisal is required, even in a small estate. The inventory is either attached to the affidavit of small estate or, in a probate, filed with the court.

In a probate the inventory and appraisal is always required. It serves various purposes, including, to adjust the size of the personal representative’s probate bond (unless waived), to begin a probate accounting, and to determine the statutory fees owed to the personal representative and to his or her attorney.

The appraised values of assets listed on an inventory of a decedent’s estate are established by the local court appointed probate referee (a special appraiser).

Real property, vehicles and household contents, including firearms, are assets routinely appraised by a probate referee. However, valuable items of personal property — such as paintings, antiques, jewelry, valuable stamps and coins — require a private personal property appraiser.

That additional appraisal is incorporated by reference into the inventory and appraisal. The inventory is then submitted to the court (in a probate) or is attached to a small estate affidavit, as relevant.

In California, there is a Judicial Council inventory and appraisal form that is used in court proceedings. It has two attached schedules, that is, schedule one, lists bank accounts and date of death balances, and schedule two, lists real and personal property (including vehicles) where values are determined by the probate referee.

With trust administrations, the trustee still needs to prepare an inventory and appraisal, but is not limited to using the services of a probate referee or the Judicial Council form.

However, if the probate referee is utilized, then a different Judicial Council form called an Appraisal Report of California Probate Referee is then used.

The appraisal report has three different schedules that may be attached, as relevant, schedule one for real property, schedule two for stocks and bonds, and schedule three for personal property and miscellaneous other items.

The appraised date of death values listed on an Inventory and Appraisal or Appraisal Report sets the income tax basis of the appraised decedent’s assets. Basis is used to compute capital gains or losses on sales or exchanges of assets. That is, when assets are sold or exchanged for more than their income tax basis then there may be a capital gains tax owed on that transaction.

An inventory and appraisal can be modified by the filing of a corrected inventory (to correct mistakes on an already filed inventory) and a supplemental inventory (to add additional assets).

The total value of all assets under management, taking into consideration all inventories, becomes part of the Fee Base for computing statutory fees owed to the personal representative and his or her attorney.

The foregoing discussion is not legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for guidance.

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