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News

Big Valley Small Farms Tour showcases local agriculture Sept. 13

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 02 September 2025

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The biannual Big Valley Small Farms Tour is back this fall, inviting the community to explore and celebrate local agriculture.

The tour will take place Saturday, Sept. 13, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The tour is made up of six small family farms raising several kinds of crops, including blackberries, raspberries, olives for olive oil, saffron, flowers, pears and all kinds of vegetables and melons.

Visitors will have the chance to meet the farmers, tour their land and enjoy a variety of unique farm experiences.

The self-guided tour includes unique activities, tastings and demonstrations. They include:

• Valley Long Farm (Lakeport): Visitors can sample fresh walnut oil from the farm’s orchard and browse a variety of vegetables in the market garden.

• Edenberry Farm (Lakeport): Specializing in organic raspberries and blackberries, the farm will offer preserves, vinegars, and seasonal heirloom produce.

• The Ripe Choice Farm (Lakeport): The event will feature U-pick apples, fresh-pressed juice, baked goods, and a cooking demonstration by Chef Tammy.

• Campodonico Olive Farm (Lakeport): Guests can enjoy olive oil tastings and tours of the organic orchard while learning about olive cultivation and processing.

• Peace & Plenty Farm (Kelseyville): Known for regenerative farming practices, this farm grows vegetables, saffron, lavender, and cut flowers. Guided tours will be available throughout the day.

• Panella Orchards (Kelseyville): Making its debut on the tour, Panella Orchards will host hayrides and pear tastings at its century-old pear farm, along with farm stand goods.

Organizers say the event highlights both the diversity and sustainability of local farming practices, while fostering connections between growers and the community.

For more information, contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 


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Purrfect Pals: New kittens

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 02 September 2025

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County Animal Care and Control has kittens ready to meet their new people.

The kittens and cats at the shelter that are shown on this page 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. 

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Labor Day and May Day emerged from the movement for a shorter workday in industrial America

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Written by: Jeffrey Sklansky, University of Illinois Chicago
Published: 02 September 2025

It took more than a century for Chicago’s Haymarket Square to get this memorial to the historic labor strife that occurred there. Jeffrey Sklansky

Most of the world observes International Workers’ Day on May 1 or the first Monday in May each year, but not the United States and Canada. Instead, Americans and Canadians have celebrated Labor Day as a national holiday on the first Monday in September since 1894, 12 years after the first observance of Labor Day in New York City.

The celebrations aren’t the same.

In much of Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America, the event commonly called May Day honors workers’ political and economic power, often with demonstrations by socialist or workers’ parties and tributes to national labor rights. America’s Labor Day features labor union parades in many places, but for most Americans, it’s less about organized labor and more about barbecues, beach days and back-to-school sales.

Both holidays, however, arose during the same period, in the U.S. nearly 150 years ago, in the midst of an explosive labor uprising in America’s industrial heartland. Their founding united native-born and immigrant workers in an extraordinary alliance to demand an eight-hour workday at a time when American workers toiled an average of 10 or more hours daily, six days a week.

The call for shorter hours was rooted in a big idea: that workers’ days belonged to them, even if employers owned their workplaces and paid for their work. That idea inspired the loftiest goals of a growing labor movement that spanned from Chicago and New York to Stockholm and Saint Petersburg. And the labor activism of the late 1800s still casts a distant light on Labor Day today, carrying a vital message about the struggle for control of workers’ daily lives.

I’m a historian at the University of Illinois Chicago, where I study the history of labor. The fight for shorter hours is no longer a top issue for organized labor in the U.S.. But it was a crusade for the eight-hour day that brought together the diverse coalition of labor groups that created Labor Day and May Day in the 1880s.

Colorful beach umbrellas cover the sand on a sunny day, with a lifeguard elevated above the crowd
On Labor Day, U.S. beaches are crowded with people who spend the late-summer holiday relaxing and having fun. One such destination is Chincoteague Island, Va., seen here on Labor Day weekend in 2018. Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Labor Day’s radical roots

Led by socialist-leaning trade unions, Labor Day’s founders included skilled, native-born craft workers defending control over their trades, immigrant laborers seeking relief from daylong drudgery, and revolutionary anarchists who saw the quest for control of the workers’ day as a step toward seizing factories and smashing the state.

They originally chose Sept. 5, 1882, for the first Labor Day to coincide with a general assembly in New York City of what was then the largest and broadest association of American workers, the Knights of Labor. Two years later, labor leaders moved the annual event to the first Monday in September, giving the majority of workers a two-day weekend for the first time.

As Labor Day parades and picnics spread, many American cities and states soon made it an official holiday. But since few employers gave workers the day off in its early years, Labor Day likewise became “a virtual one-day general strike in many cities,” according to historians Michael Kazin and Steven Ross.

American roots of May Day

My students come from working-class, mostly immigrant families, and Chicago’s history of labor conflict is all around our downtown campus in the heart of what were once meatpacking plants, stockyards and crowded immigrant neighborhoods.

My office is about 12 blocks from the spot – surrounded today by upscale office buildings – where the eight-hour movement reached a bloody climax in the battle of Haymarket Square. May Day commemorates that battle.

On May 1, 1886, unions of skilled workers organized by their crafts or trades led a nationwide general strike for the eight-hour day. They were joined by radical socialists, militant anarchists and many members of the Knights of Labor. More than 100,000 workers took part across the country.

The most dramatic demonstrations happened in Chicago, which had become the second-largest city in the U.S. after years of swift growth. Nearly 40,000 striking Chicago workers shut down much of that burgeoning industrial, agricultural and commercial hub. Three days later, a bomb thrown at a rally in Haymarket Square killed seven police officers, sparking a sweeping nationwide crackdown on labor activism.

In 1889, socialist trade unions and workers’ parties, meeting in Paris for the first congress of a new Socialist International, proclaimed May 1 an international workers’ holiday. They were partly following the lead of the new American Federation of Labor, which had called for renewed strikes on the anniversary of the 1886 action.

And they were honoring the memory of the eight labor activists who had been tried and convicted for the Haymarket bombing solely on the basis of their speeches and radical politics, in what was widely viewed as a rigged trial. Four “Haymarket martyrs” had been hanged and a fifth died by suicide before he could be executed.

Protesters march in the streets, waving French flags and holding a labor-themed poster aloft, with French words.
Protesters march through the streets of Marseille, France, with flags and placards on May 1, 2025, to mark International Workers Day. Denis Thaust/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

An earlier labor win

Though May 1 had long been associated with European celebrations of springtime, its modern meaning has deeper American roots that precede the Haymarket tragedy. It was on that date in 1867 that workers in Chicago celebrated an earlier victory.

At the end of the Civil War, campaigns for an eight-hour workday arose in cities across the country, championing a common interpretation of the abolition of slavery: for many workers, emancipation meant that employers purchased only their labor, not their lives.

Employers might monopolize workers’ means of making a living, but not their hours and days.

The movement led to laws declaring an eight-hour day in six states, including Illinois, where the new rule went into effect on May 1, 1867. But employers widely disobeyed or circumvented the laws, and states failed to enforce them while they lasted, so workers continued to struggle for a shorter workday.

Seizing the day

In the 19th century, American workers’ labor came to be measured by how long they worked and how much they were paid. While they were divided by their widely different wages, they were united by the generally uniform hours at each workplace.

The demand for a shorter workday without a pay cut was designed to appeal to all wage earners no matter who they were, where they were from, or what they did for a living.

Labor leaders said shorter hours meant employers would have to hire more people, creating jobs and boosting hourly pay. Spending less time on the job would enable workers to become bigger consumers, spurring economic growth.

Having “eight hours for work, eight hours for rest, and eight hours for what we will,” a popular labor movement refrain, would also leave more time for education, organization and political action.

Most broadly, the fight for shorter hours encapsulated workers’ struggle to control their own time, both on and off the job. That far-reaching struggle included efforts to limit the number of years people spent earning a living by ending child labor and creating pensions for retired workers – a topic I’m currently researching.

Benjamin Franklin famously said, “Time is money,” meaning that time off costs money that workers could be making on the job. But the message of the movement for a shorter workday was that the worth of workers’ lives could not be calculated in dollars and cents.

Diverging holidays

In the Haymarket battle’s aftermath, the alliance of radicals and reformers, factory operatives and skilled artisans, U.S.-born workers and immigrant laborers began to come apart. And as union leaders in the American Federation of Labor parted ways with socialists and anarchists, each side of the divided workers’ movement claimed one of the two labor days as its own, making the holidays appear increasingly opposed and losing sight of their shared foundation in the campaign for a shorter workday.

Conservative politicians and employers hostile to unions began to equate labor organizing with bomb throwing. In response, trade unions seeking acceptance as part of American industry and democracy displayed their allegiance on Labor Day by waving the American flag, singing patriotic songs and portraying themselves as proud, native-born Americans as opposed to foreign workers with subversive ideas.

Many political radicals and the immigrant workers among whom they found much of their following, meanwhile, came to identify more with the international workers’ movement associated with May Day than with American business and politics. They disavowed May Day’s origins among American trade unions, even as many trade unions distanced themselves from the radical roots of Labor Day. By the turn of the century, May Day moved further from the center of American culture, while Labor Day became more mainstream and less militant.

A man in a t-shirt identifying him as a member of Sheet Metal Workers Local 10, wearing a straw hat with American flags poking it out of it, walks in a parade.
A member of Sheet Metal Workers Local 105 walks in the small annual Labor Day parade hosted by the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor Labor Coalition on Sept. 5, 2022, in Wilmington, Calif. Mario Tama/Getty Images

20th-century gains and losses

In the 20th century, labor unions won shorter hours for many of their members across the country. But they detached that demand from the broader agenda of workers’ autonomy and international solidarity.

They gained a landmark achievement with the federal enactment of the eight-hour day and 40-hour workweek for many industries during the 1930s. At that point, economist John Maynard Keynes projected that the rising productivity of labor would enable 21st-century wage earners to work just three hours a day.

Workers’ productivity did keep climbing as Keynes predicted, and their wages rose apace – until the 1970s. But their work hours did not decline, leaving the three-hour day a forgotten vision of what organized labor might achieve.The Conversation

Jeffrey Sklansky, Professor of History, University of Illinois Chicago

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

Lakeport City Council to review fee increases, traffic safety and hazard mitigation plan

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Written by: LINGZI CHEN
Published: 01 September 2025

LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Lakeport City Council will review a comprehensive user fee study proposing fee increases, hear updates on traffic safety and consider a hazard mitigation plan to maintain eligibility for disaster funding.

The council will meet Tuesday, Sep. 2, at 6 p.m. in the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St. 

The agenda can be found here. 

If you cannot attend in person, and would like to speak on an agenda item, you can access the Zoom meeting remotely at this link or join by phone by calling toll-free 669-900-9128 or 346-248-7799. 

The webinar ID is 973 6820 1787, access code is 477973; the audio pin will be shown after joining the webinar. Those phoning in without using the web link will be in “listen mode” only and will not be able to participate or comment. 

Comments can be submitted by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. To give the city clerk adequate time to print out comments for consideration at the meeting, please submit written comments before 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sep. 2.

Under council business, the council will review a comprehensive study of city service fees that recommends both new charges and increases across multiple departments.

The city last conducted a full user fee study in 2006. Since then, although there has been annual adjustment based on Consumer Price Index, the staff report said those adjustments have not accounted for underlying changes in actual service costs.

The new study examined fees in administrative services, finance, planning, engineering, police, code enforcement and building.

The council will also hear an update on traffic safety and transportation, discussing traffic complaints received from December to August, enforcement efforts, road improvements and plans to improve pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure. 

Following that, the council will consider adopting the Lake County Multi-Jurisdictional Hazard Mitigation Plan, that identifies risks from natural hazards and outlines long-term strategies to reduce them. 

Adoption also keeps the city eligible for several federal and state funding for disaster mitigation, according to the staff report.

The council will also consider accepting up to $10,000 in state grant funds to replenish the city's oil spill response trailer and equipment. 

The trailer was first funded in 2019 and has been used in multiple spill incidents on Clear Lake and other water bodies. The grant will cover new containment boom, protective equipment and other supplies. 

In the closed session, city negotiators will meet with the Lakeport Police Officers Association. 

On the consent agenda — items considered noncontroversial and usually accepted as a slate on one vote — are ordinances; waive reading except by title of any ordinances under consideration at this meeting for either introduction or passage per Government Code Section 36934; approval of the minutes of the City Council regular meeting of August 19, 2025; authorize the cancellation of the regular meeting scheduled for October 7, 2025, for National Night Out; adopt an ordinance amending Sections 9.04.010 and 9.08.110 of the Lakeport Municipal Code related to alcohol possession and consumption in city parklands; approval of application 2025-042, with staff recommendations, for the CLHS Homecoming Parade; and adopt a resolution accepting construction of the South Main Street Pavement Rehabilitation Project by Granite Construction Company and authorize the filing of the Notice of Completion.

Email staff reporter Lingzi Chen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 

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