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News

PG&E restores power to all PSPS-impacted customers, reports on damage during windstorm

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 20 August 2021
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — Pacific Gas and Electric said Thursday night that it had restored power to all of the 50,000 Northern California customers impacted by a public safety power shutoff this week, and also reported on the damage to equipment from the windstorm that prompted the shutoff.

The public safety power shutoff, or PSPS, began across 13 counties — including Lake — on Tuesday evening, with the all-clear called on Wednesday, when patrols for damaged equipment began.

In Lake County, approximately 4,563 customers, including 353 in the Medical Baseline program, were impacted in areas in and around Clearlake Oaks, Kelseyville, Cobb, Lower Lake, Riviera, Clearlake Highlands, Morgan Valley, Spring Valley and Hidden Valley Lake.

The company said wind gusts peaked at 56 miles per hour in the outage area.

PG&E said 1,300 ground patrol units and 33 helicopters inspected more than 3,200 miles of distribution and transmission lines for damage or hazards.That’s a distance greater than driving from San Francisco to Miami, Florida.

As of 5 p.m. Thursday, PG&E said preliminary data show at least 10 instances of weather-related damage and hazards in the PSPS-affected areas. Of those, at least four had the potential to cause wildfire ignitions if PG&E had not de-energized power lines.

Examples of those hazards include damaged equipment and vegetation and other debris on power lines. PG&E said more hazard and damage reports are being evaluated.

In areas where equipment was damaged by the windstorm, crews made repairs and then restored power to customers, the company said.

PG&E said it will submit a report to the California Public Utilities Commission detailing this PSPS event within 10 days of the restoration of the final customers.

City of Clearlake issues emergency proclamation for Cache fire; firefighters continue work overnight

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 19 August 2021
Wreckage from the Cache fire in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — On Wednesday night, as firefighters continued their work to fully contain the Cache fire that burned in Clearlake and Lower Lake, the city of Clearlake declared an emergency in response to the incident.

City Manager Alan Flora emailed the declaration to council members, local officials and others including Lake County News shortly after 9 p.m., less than nine hours after the fire began.

Flora said staff will ask the council to ratify the declaration at its Thursday night meeting, when it will be added to the agenda as an emergency item.

The proclamation says that in addition to the 80 acres burned, the fire destroyed 60 homes, damaged Pacific Gas and Electric infrastructure, and resulted in “significant private property damage,” the full extent of which is still unknown.

The document also states that the majority of Creekside Mobile Home Park and portions of Cache Creek Mobile home park were destroyed, which causes concerns for pollution due to their proximity to Cache Creek.

Firefighters make their way to the Cache fire in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

Speaking Wednesday night from the incident command post at Lake Street and Tish-A-Tang Road, Lake County Fire Chief Willie Sapeta — one of the first on scene who was acting as incident commander overnight — said the damage assessment was still underway so he declined to estimate the number of structures destroyed, anticipating he would have firm numbers on Thursday morning.

He said most of the fire’s damage was centered on the south side of Dam Road, just east of Wilkinson Avenue.

Late Wednesday, the fire remained at 80 acres with 20% containment. Sapeta explained that it was only 20% because there was still a lot of fire burning within the perimeter, with spot fires continuing to kick up into the night.

“We’ll be hitting it all night and tomorrow,” Sapeta said.

During the course of the day, the Cache fire drew a huge response from agencies around Lake as well as four other counties, Sapeta said.

Two Cache fire evacuees, Liz and Vicki, wait for a ride at the bus shelter near Walmart in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

Fire grows fast, displacing thousands

The fire was first dispatched at 12:36 p.m. in the area of Sixth Avenue at Cache Street.

Initial reports stated that it was the result of a commercial vehicle fire that had spread into vegetation.

Follow-up reports from the scene would put the fire between Fourth and Sixth avenues, between Cache and Wilkinson avenues.

Sapeta confirmed that dispatch’s initial report was that it was a commercial vehicle fire, adding that the investigation is ongoing.

Based on the initial information, the Cache fire appears to be the second vehicle-caused fire in less than a week that had threatened a Lake County community. The Coyote fire on Friday, which burned 127 acres and some outbuildings, began due to a vehicle rollover, as Lake County News has reported.

A Cache fire evacuee on foot on Highway 53 in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

Sapeta said when he arrived — radio reports put him on scene within minutes — the fire was an acre in size and “running hard at me,” and was “ripping pretty good” in 20 mile per hour winds.

“It had such a rapid rate that we couldn’t keep up with it,” said Sapeta.

The first units on scene reported multiple RVs in the area on fire and an extreme rate of fire spread.

Reports from the scene had it growing from Sapeta’s initial size estimate of an acre to up to 25 acres within five minutes, with Sapeta calling for evacuations to begin in the immediate area — specifically, for Wilkinson on the north side of Dam Road — shortly after his arrival.

At 1 p.m. Wednesday an online meeting of the Abandoned Vehicle Abatement Service Authority — which includes city and county representatives — was called to order.

A family waits with its pets in the parking lot of the Walmart in Clearlake, California, after evacuating from the path of the Cache fire on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

District 1 Supervisor Moke Simon, who chairs the committee, handed over the running of the meeting to vice chair, Clearlake City Councilman Russell Perdock, saying he wanted to travel to Clearlake to get eyes on the fire. Simon said he’d spoken with Sapeta, who told him that firefighters were “getting their asses handed to them.”

Sapeta told Lake County News that, all told, 28 engines, five dozers, 10 overhead or management personnel, seven tankers, five helicopters and nine water tenders would respond to assist.

Firefighting resources came from fire agencies all over Lake County, as well as from Colusa, Marin — which sent two hand crews and an engine — as well as Mendocino and Sonoma counties, Sapeta said.

The Clearlake Police Department, California Highway Patrol and Lake County Sheriff’s Office were part of the response, evacuating the residents — in some cases running from door to door to get people out, according to radio traffic.

Sapeta said a local water company stepped up to help, with the cities of Clearlake and Lakeport and the county of Lake also sending water tenders from their respective water agencies.

A Cal Fire helicopter was among five copters that worked the Cache fire in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

Evacuees flee to safety

As the fire grew, evacuation orders for several zones in the county’s Zonehaven system were issued. Some county residents reported to Lake County News that they had issues using the Zonehaven website and that it crashed at one point.

Sapeta estimated 1,600 residents of Clearlake and Lower Lake were under evacuation orders or warnings at the height of the incident.

Of those, about 1,000 residents were still evacuated late Wednesday, Sapeta said.

An evacuation shelter was established at Kelseyville High School less than two hours after the fire started.

Colusa County firefighters were among those responding to assist with the Cache fire in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

Sheriff Brian Martin told Lake County News on Wednesday night that 32 people were registered to stay there at that time.

Among those evacuating on Wednesday afternoon were two women, who identified themselves as Liz and Vicki, who Lake County News photographer Gemini Garcia encountered at the bus stop at Walmart.

They had been dropped there by an ambulance to wait for a ride to the evacuation center.

Liz said her home was burning as she left. She said she felt numb.

Many people who evacuated waited at Walmart, where employees gave them cold bottles of water.

People waited with pets in cages, not knowing when they would be able to return home.

Firefighters working on the Cache fire in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

Rescues, injuries and recovery

Two injuries have been confirmed during the incident. One was an elderly burn victim at the Cache Creek Mobile Home Park who was seriously injured. An ambulance was dispatched to the park at 1:46 p.m. Sapeta said the victim was later flown out of the county.

Then, just after 8:15 p.m., incident command reported that one firefighter was being sent to Adventist Health Clear Lake Hospital with a minor eye injury. Earlier in the day, the hospital had diverted all medical transports in response to the fire, according to radio reports.

Animal control officials and the Lake Evacuation and Animal Protection, or LEAP, group also were dispatched to the scene due to injured pets and livestock.

The still-burning ruins of homes and vehicles destroyed in the Cache fire in Clearlake, California, on Wednesday, August 18, 2021. Photo by Gemini Garcia/Third Iris Photography.

North Bay Animal Services reported on Facebook Wednesday that its officers had been responding to welfare calls on animals caught in the Cache fire, showing pictures of injured goats and a dog with singed fur transported to the Clearlake animal shelter for treatment.

Lake County Animal Care and Control said the phone lines for LEAP assistance would reopen at 8:25 a.m. Thursday. Call 707-263-0278 if you need help with animals in the evacuation zones.

Besides fully containing the fire, what’s ahead is more of what Lake County has endured repeatedly over the past decade — fire cleanup and rebuilding.

State Sen. Mike McGuire, who has been a key player in Lake County’s fire recovery, said in a Wednesday night Facebook post that the fire was “simply devastating.”

He added, “We’ll be working hand in hand with Assemblymember Aguiar-Curry, the City, County and neighbors on recovery and debris clean-up in the weeks to come.”

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.




081821 Cache Fire Emergency Proclamation
by LakeCoNews on Scribd

PG&E issues weather ‘all clear,’ begins restoring power to areas impacted by PSPS

Details
Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 19 August 2021
A PG&E map showing in purple the customers in and around Lake County, California, who remained out of power due to a public safety power outage early on Thursday, August 19, 2021.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Pacific Gas and Electric Co. said its crews began conducting patrols on Wednesday after the high winds that prompted a public safety power shutoff the previous night had subsided.

The company said its meteorologists began issuing the weather “all clear” Wednesday morning for portions of affected areas impacted by the public safety power shutoff, or PSPS.

As of 10 p.m. Wednesday, PG&E said it had restored power to 55% — or 27,000 — of the impacted customers.

The remaining customers are expected to have their power restored by late Thursday afternoon or early Thursday evening, PG&E said.

PG&E had been planning to turn off the power to 51,000 counties across 18 counties on Tuesday night.

However, on Wednesday, the company said it removed five counties — Alameda, Contra Costa, Sierra, Trinity and Yuba — from the shutoff scope.

That left 48,000 customers in portions of Lake and 12 counties: Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Mendocino, Napa, Plumas, Shasta, Solano, Sonoma, Tehama and Yolo.

In Lake County, the number of impacted customers in the first PSPS of the year was 4,563, including 353 in the Medical Baseline program, PG&E said.

During the shutoff, PG&E said it recorded wind gusts of 56 miles per hour at Jarbo Gap in Butte County, 48 miles per hour at Wilson Hill Road in Shasta County and 55 miles per hour at Thomes Creek in Tehama County.

Once the windstorm had passed, PG&E said its crews had to begin patrolling more than 3,289 miles of transmission and distribution lines to ensure that no damage or hazards existed before reenergizing the lines to restore power to customers.

PG&E said 1,302 ground patrol units and 33 helicopters were involved in the patrol work.

By Wednesday afternoon, power restoration had begun in some areas where PG&E said it was safe to do so.

There were reports in some parts of Lake County that power was being turned on Wednesday afternoon.

At the same time, due to the Cache fire in Clearlake, transmission lines through the fire area had been temporarily deenergized, according to radio reports.

A PG&E map of the PSPS area showed a large portion of Lake County’s impacted customers remained without power early Thursday morning, with restoration expected by 2 p.m. Thursday in most of those outage areas.

Three community resource centers remain open in Lake County until the outage is fully resolved. They are open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. They are:

— Clearlake Senior Community Center, 3245 Bowers Ave., Clearlake.
— Mountain Lions Club (also known as Little Red Schoolhouse), 15780 Bottle Rock Road, Cobb.
— Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians Red Hills property, 7130 Red Hills Road, Kelseyville.

The centers offer charging for medical equipment and electronic devices, information on the outage, and water, snacks and other essential items.

For more information visit the PSPS website.

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.

Elections office reports on upcoming gubernatorial recall election

Details
Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 19 August 2021
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lake County Registrar of Voters said registered voters should soon receive ballots for the California Gubernatorial Recall Election set to take place next month.

The election is set for Sept. 14, and Registrar of Voters Maria Valadez reported that all registered voters will be mailed a vote-by-mail ballot to ensure a safe and accessible voting option during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mailing of vote-by-mail ballots began no later than Monday, Aug. 16, Valadez said. Supplemental mailings will follow for newly registered or re-registered voters.

Valadez said her office will begin processing the returned vote-by-mail ballots on Monday, Aug. 23, with the processing of the vote-by-mail voter ballots will continue through Election Day as well as during the official canvass. Results won’t be released until after polls close on Sept. 14.

To ensure there are no delays in receiving your ballot in the mail, verify that the Registrar of Voters has your most up-to-date voter information. Visit https://voterstatus.sos.ca.gov/ or call 707-263-2372 or toll-free at 888-235-6730 to verify both your residential and mailing address.

Is everything correct? If not, you can update your registration by re-registering to vote at http://registertovote.ca.gov or by calling 707-263-2372 and requesting a voter registration form be mailed to you.

Return your vote by mail ballot

The Registrar of Voters Office encourages you to vote safely at home, and return your vote-by-mail ballot in one of the following ways:

— Mail your ballot on or before Election Day; no postage is required.
— At any official ballot drop box location. Visit the following website at https//caearlyvoting.sos.ca.gov/ or call 707-263-2372 for locations.
— At the Lake County Registrar of Voters Office or at any polling place location within the state of California.

Track your vote-by-mail ballot

Receive your personalized text message, emails or voicemails letting you know when your ballot is mailed, received, and counted by the Registrar of Voters Office by subscribing to https://wheresMyBallot.sos.ca.gov.

In-person voting

There will be 22 polling place locations on Election Day. Polling place locations will be staffed for voters to drop off voted ballots or to be issued a replacement ballot from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

To vote in-person at your assigned polling place site on Election Day (please call the Registrar of Voters Office for instructions). You will be required to vote a provisional ballot if you are unable to surrender your vote by mail ballot and envelope.

For additional information call the Registrar of Voters Office at 707-263-2372 or 888-235-6730.
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  2. Wildland fire in Clearlake prompts evacuations
  3. PG&E moves forward with power shutoff to 51,000 Northern California customers
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