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News

Flood watch issued for Lake County

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 23 October 2021
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The National Weather Service has issued a flood watch for Lake County due to the series of storms expected to bring heavy rain through Tuesday.

The flood watch is in effect from late Saturday night through Sunday night.

The National Weather Service said an atmospheric river is forecast to focus over northwestern California during Sunday before shifting southward Sunday night or Monday, with the system expected to bring periods of moderate to heavy rainfall.

The forecast calls for 4 to 6 inches of rain to fall Sunday for coastal and valley locations, with 5 to 8 inches possible along southwest facing mountains and ridges.

Heavy rain combined with saturated soil from recent rains across the mountains will contribute toward possible flooding, and the forecast warns that low lying areas, creeks, streams, culverts and portions of urban areas may experience flooding due to heavy rainfall.

The Lake County forecast calls for the potential for up to a quarter of an inch on Saturday and between 1 and 2 inches of rain on Saturday night, coupled with gusty winds.

On Sunday the heaviest rain is expected, with up to 4 inches during the day and another three quarters of an inch possible on Sunday night. Winds of more than 30 miles per hour, with gusts of nearly 50 miles per hour, are forecast for parts of the county.

On Monday, rainfall amounts will taper off, totaling about a tenth of an inch. There also are chances of rain on Tuesday.

Temperatures through Friday will drop into the 40s at night, and range between the mid 50s to high 60s during the day.

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.

Newsom Administration announces first multi-year cybersecurity roadmap to protect Californians’ privacy and security

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 23 October 2021
On Friday, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Administration released Cal-Secure, the state of California’s first multi-year cybersecurity roadmap.

Built on industry-leading best practices and frameworks, Cal-Secure addresses critical gaps in the state’s information and cybersecurity programs while enabling the state to manage existing and future threats more effectively.

Cal-Secure defines a path for state entities to strengthen our cybersecurity measures and prioritize resources to manage the most significant cyber risks and safeguard those services for Californians who depend on them.

“Hackers steal our time, money and peace of mind. Protecting our data is among the most important things we can do to prevent disruption to our daily lives and our economy.” said Gov. Newsom. “We have to do more to safeguard the state’s critical infrastructure, intellectual property and our status as one of the world’s leading economies.”

Cal-Secure’s roadmap outlines actionable steps, with measurable success criteria, to ensure California’s Executive Branch has a world-class cybersecurity workforce, an empowered and right-sized federated cybersecurity oversight governance structure and effective cybersecurity defenses to all technology, including critical infrastructure.

The roadmap is broken into three categories — people, process and technology — each containing strategic priorities to address critical shortfalls or concerns.

These priorities include developing and unifying California’s diverse, innovative cybersecurity workforce to safeguard the data and systems used to deliver public services; providing effective oversight supported by a flexible governance model; and investing in technology and services to enhance cybersecurity capabilities at all state entities.

Cal-Secure is designed to improve cyber defenses statewide, regardless of the existing baseline capabilities of state government agencies and entities.

This plan builds on the key objectives of the California Homeland Security Strategy, or HSS, under which California established a goal to strengthen security and preparedness across cyberspace by enhancing safety and preparedness with state, federal, local, tribal and private sector stakeholders.

The Newsom Administration has advanced $260 million in recent investments at the Department of Technology and other state entities to bolster the state’s ability to prevent and respond to cyberattacks.

The state budget also includes $11.3 million one-time and $38.8 million ongoing to mature the state’s overall security posture, improve statewide information security initiatives, analyze cyber threat intelligence and mitigate potential threats.

Cal-Secure was created through a collaborative process with the California Cybersecurity Integration Center and its four critical partners: California Department of Technology, the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, California Highway Patrol and California Military Department and the state government security community.

An infectious disease expert explains new federal rules on ‘mix-and-match’ vaccine booster shots

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Written by: Glenn J. Rapsinski, University of Pittsburgh Health Sciences
Published: 23 October 2021

 

Discuss with your doctor whether or not you need a booster – and if so, which vaccine will work best for you. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images News via Getty Images

Many Americans now have the green light to get a COVID-19 vaccine booster – and the flexibility to receive a different brand than the original vaccine they received.

On the heels of the Food and Drug Administration’s Sept. 22, 2021, emergency use authorization of a third dose – or “booster shot” – of the Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine for certain Americans, on Oct. 20, the agency also gave emergency authorization to a third Moderna shot and a second dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

On Oct. 21, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also recommended these vaccinations in light of the FDA’s authorization. The CDC’s signoff will make the Moderna booster shot available to people 65 and older, younger adults at higher risk of severe COVID-19 due to medical conditions and those who are at increased risk due to their workplace environment. People are now eligible for the Moderna booster six months after completion of their original series – as is already the case for the third Pfizer shot. The authorization made all Johnson & Johnson vaccine recipients eligible for a second shot two months after the initial dose.

Notably, the FDA and CDC also authorized a “mix-and-match” strategy, enabling eligible Americans to get a booster shot from a brand different from their original vaccine.

As an infectious disease expert, I have closely followed the development of the COVID-19 vaccines and the research on how immunity and vaccine efficacy shift over time.

With the swirling mass of news around how effective the COVID-19 vaccines are and who needs booster shots and when, it can be challenging and confusing to make sense of it all. But understanding how the immune system works can help bring clarity to the reasons some people could benefit from the authorized shots.

How vaccine efficacy evolves

The discussion and perceived urgency around booster shots has partially been driven by the occurrence of “breakthrough” COVID-19 infections in fully vaccinated people. The term breakthrough misleadingly implies that the vaccines failed, but this is not the case. The intention of the vaccine is to reduce hospitalizations and deaths, a goal that the COVID-19 vaccines continue to meet.

While the Pfizer/Biontech mRNA vaccine shows decreasing efficacy against asymptomatic and mild infections over the first six months after vaccination, studies show that it continues to be highly effective at preventing hospitalizations and deaths, including against the delta variant, in the first six months.

A clinical study of the Moderna vaccine showed that antibody levels remain strong after six months as well. But studies after the six-month mark have been mixed, with reports of waning antibody levels leaving some researchers concerned that a booster shot strategy is essential. However, the limited data left too many questions for the FDA and CDC to approve a booster shot for all Americans, at least at this time.

A man wearing a mask receives a COVID-19 vaccine booster.
Frank Mallone, 71, receives a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine booster shot in Washington, D.C. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images

Still, the overwhelming majority of intensive care admissions and deaths from COVID-19 continue to be in unvaccinated people. The rare deaths from COVID-19 in vaccinated people are mostly in people with immune systems weakened either by age or underlying conditions, which is why booster shots have been authorized for these groups. While boosters clearly help the individual, it is just as important for everyone to get fully vaccinated to protect vulnerable people by reducing the overall number of cases in the community.

Vaccines rev up the immune system

All three of the authorized vaccines in the U.S. work by giving the body instructions for making the spike protein from the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19. The spike protein, which resembles a stem with three buds on the end, is what enables the actual virus to invade cells and cause infection. The mRNA vaccines by Pfizer/BioNtech and Moderna provide the blueprint for the spike protein in the form of mRNA in a drug-delivery system called a lipid nanoparticle. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine gives DNA instructions inside the coat of a different virus, called a viral vector.

The immune system quickly recognizes that these foreign proteins do not belong, and it generates an immune response to fight them off. These newfound defenses gear the body up to protect against the real virus. During this primary immune response, immune cells encounter spike proteins and, as a defense, they produce antibodies, “memory” cells and T-cells that can kill infected cells to prevent the virus from multiplying. Some of these antibodies and T-cells from the primary immune response persist over time, though they decrease during the first month after vaccination, while memory cells last much longer.

Then, when someone gets an additional dose of vaccine, the immune system goes through a secondary immune response. Thanks to the memory cells, the secondary immune response activates more rapidly, triggering lots of antibody production and T-cell activation. More mature antibodies are produced as well, and they are even better at trapping the spike proteins. And T-cells proliferate, helping to stop the intruder in its tracks. This type of secondary immune response can be activated again and again when repeat exposures to a vaccine – or booster doses – occur. Each time, the immune response mounts a stronger and more effective defense.

Mix-and-match vaccine boosters

Multiple studies, including preliminary research from the National Institutes of Health that is not yet peer-reviewed, have shown that the mix-and-match strategy is safe and effective at providing a significant immune boost.

Additionally, mixing vaccine types may be most beneficial in those who initially received a non-mRNA vaccine. The NIH data suggests that people who got the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine had a bigger increase and achieved a higher antibody concentration after receiving an mRNA booster than if they received the Johnson & Johnson booster. For people who first received one of the mRNA vaccines, Pfizer or Moderna, followed by a third shot with Johnson & Johnson, the antibody response was similar to that seen in those who got a third, or homologous, mRNA dose.

Studies exploring why the mix-and-match strategy is more effective with some initial vaccines and not others are underway. Understanding this and the effectiveness of different vaccine combinations, including using vaccines that are authorized in other countries, will help improve vaccination strategies all over the world.

Interchanging vaccine types may have greater advantages in some people than in others, which will become clearer as more data is gathered. But the good news is that the immune response seems to get a solid boost from booster shots, regardless of which vaccine combination is used.

[Get The Conversation’s most important coronavirus headlines, weekly in a science newsletter]The Conversation

Glenn J. Rapsinski, Pediatric Infectious Diseases Fellow, University of Pittsburgh Health Sciences

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

Estate Planning: California’s more generous homestead exemption

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Written by: DENNIS FORDHAM
Published: 23 October 2021
Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo.

In 2021, California significantly increased the protection under the “homestead exemption” and the “homestead declaration.”

Until 2021, the amount of the homestead exemption (protection) varied from $75,000 to $175,000 depending on circumstances.

Now, the exemption amount varies between $300,000 and $600,000, adjusted annually for inflation, based on the countywide median sale price for a single-family home.

These two important exemptions can protect either all or a portion of a homeowner’s equity in one principal dwelling (home), owned either in their name or in the name of their spouse (or both), even if the spouses reside separately, against any unsecured creditors who obtain judgment liens against the home.

These exemptions apply regardless of whether the principal dwelling is owned outright or in a living trust. A dwelling includes a residence but can also include a mobile home, a trailer or a boat.

A judicial sale can only occur when the amount of a bid at a judicial auction exceeds the amount of the homestead exemption plus any additional amount necessary to satisfy all liens and encumbrances on the property.

If a sale occurs then a portion of the proceeds are exempt for six months after receipt, during which time they can be used to buy a new dwelling.

The homestead exemption, which applies automatically, protects a certain amount of equity against judicial foreclosures by judgment creditors of a person’s or a family’s principal dwelling in California. It also applies when a homestead is damaged, destroyed, or acquired for public use to the proceeds.

Equity is the amount by which the value of your principal residence exceeds the combined value of all secured loans (typically mortgages and equity lines of credit).

The automatic homestead exemption does not protect proceeds from a voluntary sale. That additional protection requires a declaration of homestead.

Next, the declaration of homestead requires the homeowner to file a sworn and notarized declaration of homestead form with the county where the principal dwelling is situated.

Once filed, the declared homestead protects the same amount of equity as the homestead exemption, but this time also with respect to sale proceeds from voluntary sales of the principal dwelling.

If a home is sold voluntarily, then the homeowner has six months protection to use the proceeds to purchase a new dwelling and record a new homestead declaration within that same period.

The date when the declaration of homestead is filed is very important. The declaration does not pertain to judgment liens filed with the county prior to the declaration. So filing one’s declaration early when no judgment liens are imminent is prudent.

Moreover, if the homeowner buys a new home within six months, the homeowner can record a new declaration of homestead. Any equity from the sale of the first home that is used to buy the second home is also protected.

The declaration of homestead, however, does not protect against the recordation of child, family, or spousal support judgments. Like elsewhere, California law treats support obligations as exceptional and sacrosanct.

Consider an example: John and Mary Smith, a hypothetical married couple who own a house worth $400,000, with an unpaid balance of $200,000 owed on the mortgage; the Smiths have $200,000 of equity.

The Smiths owe $80,000 to a judgment creditor who has filed a judgment lien against their home. The Smiths qualify for a homestead exemption amount of at least $300,000. Thus, all $200,000 equity is protected from judgment creditors.

However, if the Smiths had paid off their mortgage then their equity would be the full $400,000 house value and the exemption amount would depend on in which county they reside in California.

Thus, having some unpaid mortgage can help keep the equity within the exemption amount and avoid a forced sale of the residence.

The foregoing is not legal advice. If needing guidance regarding the homestead exemption or homestead declaration consult an attorney.

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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