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

News

CHP’s Clear Lake Area office welcomes new officer

Details
Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 07 February 2026
California Highway Patrol Officer Dante Ramirez has joined the agency’s Clear Lake Area office in Kelseyville, California. Photo courtesy of the CHP.


LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The California Highway Patrol’s Clear Lake Area office is welcoming its newest officer.

Dante Ramirez of Crescent City has successfully completed cadet training at the California Highway Patrol Academy.

He is assigned to duty at the CHP's Clear Lake Area office, located in Kelseyville.

Officer Ramirez graduated from Del Norte High School in 2020. 

Before attending the CHP Academy, he worked as an apprentice carpenter at Fern Hook Cabins. 

He is proud of himself and his roommates for overcoming the academy's challenges.

At the CHP Academy, cadet training starts with nobility in policing, leadership, professionalism, ethics, and cultural diversity. Training also includes mental illness response and crisis intervention techniques. 

Cadet instruction covers patrol operations, crash investigation, first aid, and the arrest of suspected violators, including those who drive under the influence of alcohol or drugs. 

During their six months of training, the cadets also receive training in traffic control, report writing, recovery of stolen vehicles, assisting the motoring public, issuing citations, emergency scene management, and knowledge of various codes, including the Vehicle Code, Penal Code and Health and Safety Code.

Ramirez was one of 129 new officers who graduated from the Academy on Friday.

“These new officers represent the future of public safety in California. The badge they were given is on loan from the people of this state, and every day they must earn the right to wear it through professionalism, ethical conduct and accountability to the public they serve,” said CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee.

CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee, at left, speaks to a newly graduated officer on Friday, Feb. 6, 2026. Photo courtesy of the CHP.

Tribes cite ongoing federal review and judicial warnings in opposing Scotts Valley ‘preview casino’ in Vallejo

Details
Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 07 February 2026



NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — The Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, the Kletsel Dehe Wintun Nation, the Lytton Rancheria of California, and the United Auburn Indian Community this week expressed serious concern as the Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians moves toward opening a temporary “preview casino” in Vallejo, while the U.S. Department of the Interior continues an active reconsideration of the project’s gaming eligibility.

The group said that any move to proceed at this time would come despite a clear warning from the federal court overseeing the matter that Scotts Valley would be “ill-served” by relying on the temporary restoration of gaming eligibility while the Department completes its reconsideration, which the court has directed be conducted expeditiously and thoroughly.

“The court was explicit that its ruling should not be viewed as a green light to proceed with gaming activity while the federal review is ongoing,” said Anthony Roberts, chairman of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation. “Moving forward with this short-term cash grab ignores the Court’s warning, disrespects the reconsideration process, and jeopardizes the City of Vallejo’s limited public safety and other resources for its citizens.”

Lake County News reached out to a representative for Scotts Valley but so far has not received a response.

The tribes emphasized that the issue is not competition, but respect for the rule of law, tribal sovereignty, and the integrity of the federal review process, particularly where significant questions remain about gaming eligibility, historical connection to the land, and potential environmental and cultural impacts.

“Our concern here is specific and process-based,” said Chairman Wright of the Kletsel Dehe Wintun Nation. “Where the Department of the Interior is actively reconsidering gaming eligibility, and the court has cautioned against reliance on interim decisions, moving forward with gaming activity at this site before that review is complete risks undermining trust in the process and creating avoidable conflict among tribes and local communities.” 

“This is not about opposing economic development,” said Chairperson Andy Mejia of the Lytton Rancheria of California. “It is about ensuring that development occurs lawfully, responsibly, and in a manner that honors tribal history and federal law. Proceeding with a casino, even a so-called ‘preview’ facility, while the Department of the Interior is actively reconsidering its own decision risks undermining the integrity of the federal review process.”

The tribes noted that the Department of the Interior has explicitly acknowledged that its earlier approval may have been based on legal error. They further noted that substantial evidence submitted by local tribes was not considered, raising serious questions about whether the Vallejo site qualifies for gaming under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.

“Rushing forward in the face of unresolved legal questions does not create certainty or shared prosperity,” said Chairman John Williams of the United Auburn Indian Community. “It puts Vallejo, the Tribe, and neighboring communities in an untenable position if the Department ultimately determines that the land is not eligible for gaming.”

The tribes reiterated their call for the Scotts Valley Band to pause any gaming operations until the federal reconsideration is complete and a final, lawful determination is issued.

“We respect the sovereignty of all Tribes,” the joint statement concluded. “That respect includes honoring the courts, the federal process, and the rights of neighboring tribes whose ancestral, cultural, and historical ties to this land are at stake.”

What Olympic athletes see that viewers don’t: Machine-made snow makes ski racing faster and riskier – and it’s everywhere

Details
Written by: Keith Musselman, University of Colorado Boulder and Agnes Macy, University of Colorado Boulder
Published: 07 February 2026

U.S. skier Rosie Brennan leads a group during the women’s team sprint classic cross-country skiing competition at the 2022 Winter Olympics. AP Photo/Aaron Favila

When viewers tune in to the 2026 Winter Olympics, they will see pristine, white slopes, groomed tracks and athletes racing over snow-covered landscapes, thanks in part to a storm that blanketed the mountain venues of the Italian Alps with fresh powder just in time.

But at lower elevations, where cross-country and other events are held, athletes and organizers have been contending with rain; thin, sometimes slushy snow; and icy, machine-made surfaces.

“Most of our races are on machine-made snow,” 2026 U.S. Olympic team cross-country skier Rosie Brennan told us ahead of the Games. “TV production is great at making it look like we are in wintry, snowy places, but this year has been particularly bad.”

A male skier races down a slick track with flags flying along the wall beside him
Machine-made snow increasingly makes the Winter Games possible. It’s also slicker to race and harder to fall on. Here, Olympic skier Ben Ogden of the U.S. competes during the sprint of the FIS Cross-Country World Cup Tour de Ski in Toblach, Italy, on Dec. 28, 2024. Federica Vanzetta/NordicFocus/Getty Images

As scientists who study mountain snow, water resources and the human impact of warming winters, we see winter’s changes through data: rising temperatures, shrinking snowpack, shorter snow seasons.

Olympic athletes experience changing winter conditions personally, in ways the public and scientists rarely do. Lack of snowfall and more frequent rain affect when and where they can train, how they train and how dangerous the terrain can become.

We talked with Brennan and cross-country skiers Ben Ogden and Jack Young as they were preparing for the 2026 Winter Games. Their experiences reflect what many athletes describe: a sport increasingly defined not by the variability of natural winter but by the reliability of industrialized snowmaking.

What the cameras don’t show

Snowmaking technology makes it possible to create halfpipes for freestyle snowboarding and skiing competitions. It also allows for races when natural snow is scarce – the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing relied entirely on machine-made snow for many races.

However, machine-made snow creates a very different surface than natural snow, changing the race.

Three skiers sit at the top of a ski jump. Their view shows how much dry, snow-free ground is around the jump area
Athletes train at the ski jumping arena prior to the Open Italian Championship in Predazzo, a 2026 Winter Olympics venue, on Dec. 23, 2025. Stefano Rellandini/AFP via Getty Images

In clouds, each unique snowflake shape is determined by the temperature and humidity. Once formed, the iconic star shape begins to slowly erode as its crystals become rounded spheres. In this way, natural snow provides a variety of textures and depths: soft powder after a storm, firm or brittle snow in cold weather, and slushy, wet snow during rain or melt events.

Machine-made snow varies less in texture or quality. It begins and ends its life as an ice pellet surrounded by a thin film of liquid water. That makes it slower to change, easier to shape, and, once frozen, it hardens in place.

‘They’re faster, icier and carry more risk’

When artificial snow is being made, the sound is piercing – a high-pitched hiss roars from the pressurized nozzles of snow guns. These guns spew water mixed with compressed air, and it freezes upon contact with the cold air outside, creating small, dense ice particles. The drops sting exposed skin, as one of us, Agnes Macy, knows well as a former competitive skier.

Snow machines then push out artificial snow onto the racecourse. Often, the trails are the only ribbons of snow in sight – a white strip surrounded by brown mud and dead grass.

Female skiers race through a town with a church beside them, fans along the track and lots of snow-free ground outside the snowy race course.
The surrounding landscape was mostly snow-free when Rosie Brennan competed in the individual sprint at an FIS Cross-Country World Cup event in Drammen, Norway, on March 3, 2022. Federico Modica/NordicFocus/Getty Images

“Courses built for natural snow feel completely different when covered in man-made snow,” Brennan, 37, said. “They’re faster, icier, and carry more risk than anyone might imagine for cross-country skiing.”

There’s nothing quite like skiing on fresh snow. After a storm brings a blanket of light, fluffy powder, it can almost feel as though you’re floating. The snow is forgiving.

On artificial snow, skiers carry more speed into downhill runs. Downhill racers may relish the speed, but cross-country skis don’t have metal edges like downhill skis do, so step-turning or skidding around fast, icy corners can make an athlete feel out of control. It “requires a different style of skiing, skill sets and strengths than I grew up learning,” Brennan said.

How athletes adapt, with help from science

Athletes must adjust their technique and prepare their skis differently, depending on the snow conditions.

At elite levels, this is science. Snow crystal morphology, temperature, ski base material and structure, ski stiffness, skier technique and environmental conditions all interact to determine an athlete’s speed.

How snow forms. NBC News Learn.

Before cross-country, or Nordic, races, ski technicians compare multiple ski pairs prepared with different base surfaces and waxes. They evaluate how quickly each ski glides and how long it maintains that glide – traits that depend on the friction between the ski and the snow.

Compared to natural snow, machine-made snow generally provides a more durable and longer-lasting surface. In cross-country racing, that allows for more efficient and stronger pushes without skis or poles sinking deep into snow. Additionally, improvements in the machines used to groom snow now provide harder and more homogeneous surfaces that permit faster skiing.

Two male skiers on tangled on the ground after a crash.
Russia’s Alexander Terentev, right, and Czech Republic’s Michal Novak crash during a men’s cross-country sprint quarterfinal race at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Oberstdorf, Germany, on Feb. 25, 2021. AP Photo/Matthias Schrader

While fast skiing is the goal, ski crashes are also the most common cause of injury in the Winter Olympics. With machine-made snow, ski jump competitors and anyone who falls is also landing on a harder surface, which can increase the risk of injury.

Why winters are changing

Weather can always deal surprises, but long-term climate trends are shifting what can be expected of a typical winter.

In the Alps, air temperature has increased by about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) since the late 1800s, before rising fossil fuel use began increasing the levels of greenhouse gases trapping heat in the atmosphere. Globally, 2025 was the third-warmest year on record, following 2024 and 2023.

For mountain regions, these warmer conditions have consequences. Snow melts earlier and more frequently in midwinter, especially during warm spells that used to be rare.

Midwinter snowmelt events are occurring more often at higher elevations and earlier in the season across many mountain ranges of western North America. At the same time, the snow line – the elevation where precipitation shifts from snow to rain – is moving upslope.

Warming in high mountain environments is also causing the threshold where rain turns to snow to rise by tens of meters per decade in some regions. This means storms that once blanketed entire valleys in snow now may deliver snow only to upper slopes, with rain falling below.

Male ski racers turn a corner on a race course.
Taking sharp corners on icy surfaces isn’t easy on cross-country skis. Here, U.S. Olympic skier Jack Young competes in the individual sprint finals of the FIS Cross-Country World Cup Oberhof on Jan. 17, 2026, in Oberhof, Germany. Leo Authamayou/NordicFocus/Getty Images

Together, these changes mean that many winter storms produce less snow, over less area, and for shorter durations than they did a generation ago.

Training venues

The changing winter landscape has also transformed how athletes train. Traditional training venues, such as glaciers once used for summer skiing, have become unreliable. In August 2025, the Hintertux Glacier – the only year-round training center operating in Austria – announced its first temporary closure.

“It’s been increasingly hard to make plans for locations to train between races,” Brennan said. “Snow reliability isn’t great in many places. We often rely on going to higher elevations for a better chance of snow.”

Athletes race on short skis on wheels.
Biathlon athletes practice their sport on wheels at the Loop One Festival in Munich’s Olympic Park on Oct. 19, 2025. Sven Hoppe/picture alliance via Getty Images

Higher-elevation training can help, but it concentrates athletes in fewer places, reduces access for younger skiers due to the remoteness and raises costs for national teams. Some of these glaciers – like Canada’s Haig Glacier or Alaska’s Eagle Glacier – are accessible only by helicopter. When skiers can’t get to snow, dryland training on rollerskis is one of the only options.

Winter athletes see the climate changing

Because winter is their workplace, athletes often notice subtle changes before those changes show up in long-term statistics.

Even athletes in their earlier 20s, like Young, said they have noticed the rapid expansion of snowmaking infrastructure at many racing venues in recent years. Snowmaking requires large amounts of energy and water. It is also a clear sign that organizers see winters becoming less dependable.

Winter athletes like Canadian Dahria Beatty are seeing their environment change as temperatures rise.

Athletes also witness how communities are affected when poor snow conditions mean fewer visitors. “In the Alps, when conditions are bad, it is obvious how much it affects the communities,” Ogden, 25, said. “Their tourism-based livelihoods are so often negatively affected, and their quality of life changes.”

Many winter athletes are speaking publicly about their concerns. Groups such as Protect Our Winters, founded by professional snowboarder Jeremy Jones, work to advance policies that protect outdoor places for future generations.

A wintry look, but an uncertain future

For athletes at the 2026 Olympics, the variability within the Olympic region – snow at higher elevations, rain at lower ones – reflects a broader truth: The stability of winter is diminishing.

Athletes know this better than anyone. They race in it. They train in it. They depend on it.

The Winter Games will go on this year. The snow will look good on television. But at the same time, winter is changing.The Conversation

Keith Musselman, Assistant Professor in Geography, Mountain Hydrology, and Climate Change, University of Colorado Boulder and Agnes Macy, Graduate Student in Geography, University of Colorado Boulder

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

Estate Planning: Using the right estate planning approach

Details
Written by: DENNIS FORDHAM
Published: 07 February 2026
Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo.
Estate planning can involve a wide variety of asset types, such as, money, stocks and bonds, real estate, life insurance, personal property, and sometimes business interests. 

How these different assets are managed during the owner’s life and later distributed at death depends on the asset type, the person’s situation and estate planning approaches used. It may also depend on any existing court orders, such as from family court proceedings.

Does the asset or a court order restrict the owner’s options? Retirement accounts (e.g., 401(k) and Individual Retirement Accounts), for example, cannot be transferred to the participant’s trust.

They can be managed by the participant’s agent under a power of attorney and ultimately passed to the participant’s surviving designated death beneficiaries.

Also, a family court order may require certain estate planning to be in place for a minor. 

However, if there is no living death beneficiary who is named to inherit some or all of the retirement account then some or all of the account may pass under the deceased participant’s will or, failing a will, under the laws of intestate succession to the participant’s heirs. 

This is yet another reason why a will is always needed even when one has a trust and designated death beneficiary accounts because unforeseen events may upset the intended estate planning approach.

Do the circumstances of one or more death beneficiaries limit the estate planning options? For example, are one or more beneficiaries underaged minors, incapacitated persons, receiving needs based welfare benefits, or unable to manage inheritances for one reason or another? If so, then such person’s inheritances are usually held in further trust that can be designated as a beneficiary to receive any and all inheritance assets. Such trusts are drafted to meet the situation.

If real property is involved then a trust, or perhaps a Transfer on Death (“TOD”) beneficiary deed, is usually appropriate in order to avoid either a full probate court proceeding or at least a court petition to determine ownership of a decedent’s primary residence. 

Alternatively a joint tenancy or a life estate deed may be sufficient, depending on the situation.

If bank and brokerage accounts and personal property are involved, then a will, a power of attorney and pay on death beneficiary bank and transfer on death brokerage accounts may be sufficient estate planning. That depends on the situation of the beneficiaries and the person’s intentions for how they want their assets to be managed and distributed.

If an interest in a going business is involved, then it is typically advisable for the going business to be held in a legal entity such as an LLC, or a corporation or a partnership. Businesses that are operated as sole proprietorships do not continue at the death of the proprietor. The business assets, however, can still be transferred as assets. 

All said, however, if a person owns real property then a living trust is usually still the preferred estate planning vehicle as it allows for lifetime management and distribution of most asset types notably excluding retirement accounts. 

Trusts allow for contingency (‘what if’) planning by providing alternative solutions and special trustee authority to handle unforeseen eventualities, such as alternative beneficiaries and solutions to situations when the beneficiary cannot receive an outright distribution of their inheritance. 

The foregoing brief discussion is not legal advice. 

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, California. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-263-3235.
  1. Space News: NASA’s Artemis II plans to send a crew around the Moon to test equipment and lay the groundwork for a future landing
  2. Officials discuss groundwater contamination, new equipment for residents in sewer spill impact area
  3. Chasing ‘Boat No. 1’: The legacy of the Clear Lake Chamber Bass Tournament
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page