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Carroll, Paule and the Blues Project highlight 18th Blue Wing Blues Festival Labor Day weekend

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 17 August 2025
Good food and music in the gardens of the Tallman Hotel and Blue Wing Restaurant in Upper Lake, California. Photo by Nathan DeHart.


UPPER LAKE, Calif. — Six well-known blues bands over three evenings highlight the 18th annual Blue Wing Blues Festival this Labor Day weekend. 

The festival is held in the cool of the early evening under the sycamore trees between the Tallman Hotel and Blue Wing Restaurant in Upper Lake. 

Headliners this year include the powerful Bay Area blues vocalist Tia Carroll, the big blues band sound of Anthony Paule and his Soul Orchestra, and a reunion of veteran members of the well-known Blues Project Quintet.

The event starts at 6 p.m. each day beginning on Saturday, Aug. 30, and extending through Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 1.

Patrons are seated around comfortable tables in the garden and served a delicious buffet supper while enjoying the music. A short video including clips from past festivals can be found on YouTube. 

“This should be one of the best line-ups of musicians we’ve ever had here in Lake County,” said KJ DeSoto of BW Blues Productions in Kelseyville. She and co-producer Brad White have been assisting the Tallman Hotel in putting together this festival over the last few years.

Opening night on Aug. 31 will focus on some of the finest female artists in the business. 

Tia Carroll and her band have headlined festivals all over the world and shared the stage with the likes of Ray Charles, Elvin Bishop and Tommy Castro. 

Opening for Carroll will be the Women in Blues Experience with Otilia Donaire, Jill Dineen, Marina Crouse and Pamma Jamma on keys. Opening night tickets can be purchased online or by calling the Tallman Hotel.

On Sunday night, Aug. 31, the popular Red’s Blues Band from Sacramento will open for the big band sounds of the Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra, featuring the great Willy Jordan on vocals. With Paule on guitar and a full horn section to back him up, Jordan’s commanding stage presence and stirring vocals should produce a truly memorable evening. Tickets for the Saturday show can also be purchased online through Eventbrite or by calling the Tallman.

Capping the festival on Monday, Sept. 1, will be a reunion of members of the original Blues Project, that sold out venues from Greenwich Village to Bill Graham’s Fillmore Auditorium in the 1960s and 1970s. 

Led by percussionist Roy Blumenfeld, the group includes guitarists David Aguilar and Mark Newman with Ken Clark on keys and Tim Eschliman on bass. Opening for the Project will be the talented vocalist Cathy Lemons with Phil Berlowitz and the Lucky Losers Band. 

Tickets for the Monday show can also be purchased online or by calling the Tallman Hotel at 707-275-2244, Extension 0.

“I’d like to thank the many excellent local businesses that have continued to sponsor the Festival each year, and to support quality live music in Lake County,” said festival co-sponsor Bernie Butcher. 

Major sponsors this year include Kat McNeill & Lance Bowman, Lake County Tribal Health, Groundworks, and Reynolds Systems.

Also sponsoring are the law offices of Daniel Ray Bacon, Mary Haere Amodio, Judy Conard, Kelseyville Lumber, Bicoastal Media, Chacewater Wines and Olive Mill, Dancing Crow Wines, Jon and Annette Hopkins, Six Sigma Ranch & Winery, Lake Event Design, Tom and Ruth Lincoln, and Sysco Foods.

Tickets cost $75 plus tax, which includes a delicious barbecue dinner. They may be purchased online at Eventbrite.com or by calling the Tallman Hotel, located at 9550 Main St. in Upper Lake, at 707-275-2244, Extension 0. 

When workers’ lives outside work are more fulfilling, it benefits employers too

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Written by: Louis Tay, Purdue University
Published: 17 August 2025

If you never take a break, the extra hours of effort might not pay off. JGI/Tom Grill/Tetra images via Getty Images

Many employers are demanding more from workers these days, pushing them to log as many hours as possible.

Google, for example, told all its employees that they should expect to spend 60 or more hours in the office every week. Some tech companies are demanding 12-hour days, six days a week from their new hires.

More job applicants in health care, engineering and consulting have been told to expect long hours than previously demanded due to a weak job market.

On the other hand, companies such as Cisco, Booz Allen Hamilton and Intuit have earned a reputation of supporting a strong work-life balance, according to Glassdoor employee ratings.

To promote work-life balance, they offer flexible work options, give workers tips on setting boundaries and provide benefits to promote mental and physical well-being, including mindfulness and meditation training and personal coaching outside of work.

As a psychologist who studies workplace performance and well-being, I’ve seen abundant evidence that overworking employees can actually make them less productive. Instead, research shows that when employees have the time and space to lead a fulfilling life outside work, such as being free to spend time with their families or pursue creative hobbies, it improves their performance on the job.

Falling prey to the ‘focusing illusion’

For example, a team of researchers reviewed 70 studies looking at how managers support workers’ family lives. They found that when supervisors show consideration for workers’ personal roles as a family member, including providing help to workers and modeling work-family balance, those employees are more loyal and helpful on the job and are also less likely to think about quitting.

Another study found that workers who could take on creative projects outside of work became more creative at work, regardless of their own personalities. This was true even for workers who didn’t consider themselves to be very creative to start with, which suggests it was the workplace culture that really made a difference.

When employers become obsessed with their workers’ productivity, they can get hung up on tracking immediate goals such as the number of emails sent or sales calls made. But they tend to neglect other vital aspects of employees’ lives that, perhaps somewhat ironically, sustain long-term productivity.

Daniel Kahneman, the late psychologist whose research team won a Nobel Prize in economics, called this common misconception the “focusing illusion.”

In this case, many employers underestimate the hidden costs of making people work more hours than they can muster while maintaining some semblance of work-life balance.

Among them are mental health problems, burnout and high turnover rates. In other words, overly demanding policies can ultimately hinder the performance employers want to see.

Daniel Kahneman explains what the focusing illusion is.

Taking it from Simone Biles

Many top performers recognize the value of work while also valuing the time spent away from it.

“At the end of the day we’re human too,” said Simone Biles, who is widely considered the best gymnast on record. “We have to protect our mind and body, rather than just go out there and do what the world wants us to do.”

Elite athletes like Biles require time away from the spotlight to recuperate and hone their skills.

Others who are at the top of their professions turn to hobbies to recharge their batteries. Albert Einstein’s passion for playing the violin and piano was not merely a diversion from physics – it was instrumental to the famous and widely beloved scientist’s groundbreaking scientific insights.

Einstein’s second wife, Elsa Einstein, observed that he took short breaks to play music when he was thinking about his scientific theories.

Simone Biles, the champion gymnast floats through the air with her eyes firmly riveted on a bar.
Despite being the GOAT of gymnasts, Simone Biles says she is only human – just like everyone else. Aytac Unal/Anadolu via Getty Images

Taking a break

I’ve reviewed hundreds of studies that show leisure time isn’t a luxury − it fulfills key psychological needs.

Taking longer and more frequent breaks from your job than your workaholic boss might like can help you get more rest, recover from work-related stress and increase your sense of mastery and autonomy.

That’s because when employees find fulfillment outside of work they tend to become better at their jobs, making their employers more likely to thrive.

That’s what a team of researchers found when they studied the workforce at a large city hospital in the U.S. Employees who thought their bosses supported their family life were happier with their jobs, more loyal and less likely to quit.

Unsurprisingly, the happier, more supported workers also gave their supervisors higher ratings.

Researchers who studied the daily leisure activities of 100 Dutch teachers found that when the educators could take some of their time off to relax and engage in hobbies outside work, they felt better and had an easier time coping with the demands of their job the next day.

Another study of German emergency service workers found that not having enough fun over the weekend, such as socializing with friends and relatives, can undermine job performance the following week.

Finding the hidden costs of overwork

The mental health consequences of overwork, spending too many hours on the job or getting mentally or physically exhausted by your work are significant and measurable.

According to the World Health Organization, working more than 55 hours per week is associated with a 35% higher risk of having a stroke and a 17% higher risk of developing heart disease.

Working too many hours can also contribute to burnout, a state of physical, emotional and mental exhaustion caused by long-term work stress. The World Health Organization officially recognizes burnout as a work-related health hazard.

A Gallup analysis conducted in March 2025 found that even employees who are engaged at work, meaning that they are highly committed, connected and enthusiastic about what they do for a living, are twice as likely to burn out if they log more than 45 hours a week on the job.

Burnout can be very costly for employers, ranging anywhere from US$4,000 to $20,000 per employee each year. These numbers are calculated from the average hourly salaries of employees and based on the impact of burnout on aspects such as missed workdays and reduced productivity at work. That means a company with 1,000 workers could lose around $4 million every year due to burnout.

Ultimately, employers that overwork their workers have high turnover rates.

One study found that the onset of mandatory overtime for South Korean nurses made more of them decide to quit their jobs.

Similarly, a national study of over 17,000 U.S.-based nurses found that when they worked longer hours, turnover increased. This pattern is evident in many other professions besides health care, such as finance and transportation.

Seeing turnover increase

Conservative estimates of the cost of turnover for employers ranges from 1.5 to two times an employee’s annual salary. This includes the costs of hiring, onboarding and training new employees. Critically, there are also hidden costs that are harder to estimate, such as losing the departed employee’s institutional knowledge and unique connections.

Over time, making workers work extra hours can undercut an employer’s performance and threaten its viability.

Abundant evidence indicates that supporting employees’ aspirations for happier and more meaningful lives within the workplace and beyond leaves workers and their employers alike better off.The Conversation

Louis Tay, Professor of Industrial-Organizational Psychology, Purdue University

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

California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection names new executive officer

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 17 August 2025

The California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection has announced the appointment of Tony Andersen as its new executive officer.

Andersen will lead the board’s operations and policy implementation, serving as the Board’s lead staff person and liaison between government agencies, stakeholders and the public.

Andersen brings nearly two decades of experience in policy, strategic communications, and government affairs through a range of environmental, forestry, and wildfire-related leadership positions. 

Most recently, he served as the deputy secretary for communications at the California Natural Resources Agency following an appointed leadership position at Cal Fire.

Andersen has also helped lead post-fire recovery and community rebuilding efforts following Oregon’s most destructive wildfire season on record in 2020 and served in leadership roles with the Oregon Department of Forestry, Portland Water Bureau and other government leadership roles.

“Tony understands the Board’s mission and the challenges facing California’s forests, rangelands, and communities,” said Terry O’Brien, chair of the Board of Forestry and Fire Protection. “His leadership skills, collaborative approach, and ability to navigate complex natural resource policy issues will be invaluable as we continue to advance sustainable forestry and wildfire resilience across the state.”

In his new role, Andersen will lead the team that supports the Board’s regulatory and policy agenda, facilitate public engagement, and support coordination on initiatives ranging from forest management to wildfire resilience and land-use planning.

“It’s an honor to support the Board in this leadership capacity,” Andersen said. “California’s forests and wildlands are essential to our environment, economy, and way of life. I’m committed to serving the board, our partners, and California communities to ensure our policies reflect both sound science and the needs of those who depend on these landscapes.”

The California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection is a nine-member board appointed by California’s Governor and confirmed by the State Senate.

It is responsible for developing the state’s forest and fire protection policy and adopting regulations that protect and enhance California’s forests and rangelands.

Space News: Water recycling is paramount for space stations and long-duration missions − an environmental engineer explains how the ISS does it

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Written by: Berrin Tansel, Florida International University
Published: 17 August 2025

The water recovery system on the ISS is state of the art. Roscosmos State Space Corporation via AP, File

When you’re on a camping trip, you might have to pack your own food and maybe something to filter or treat water that you find. But imagine your campsite is in space, where there’s no water, and packing jugs of water would take up room when every inch of cargo space counts. That’s a key challenge engineers faced when designing the International Space Station.

Before NASA developed an advanced water recycling system, water made up nearly half the payload of shuttles traveling to the ISS. I am an environmental engineer and have conducted research at Kennedy Space Center’s Space Life Sciences Laboratory. As part of this work, I helped to develop a closed-loop water recovery system.

Today, NASA recovers over 90% of the water used in space. Clean water keeps an astronaut crew hydrated, hygienic and fed, as it can use it to rehydrate food. Recovering used water is a cornerstone of closed-loop life support, which is essential for future lunar bases, Mars missions and even potential space settlements.

A rack of machinery.
A close-up view of the water recovery system’s racks – these contain the hardware that provides a constant supply of clean water for four to six crew members aboard the ISS. NASA

NASA’s environmental control and life support system is a set of equipment and processes that perform several functions to manage air and water quality, waste, atmospheric pressure and emergency response systems such as fire detection and suppression. The water recovery system − one component of environmental control and life support − supports the astronauts aboard the ISS and plays a central role in water recycling.

Water systems built for microgravity

In microgravity environments like the ISS, every form of water available is valuable. The water recovery systems on the ISS collect water from several sources, including urine, moisture in cabin air, and hygiene – meaning from activities such as brushing teeth.

On Earth, wastewater includes various types of water: residential wastewater from sinks, showers and toilets; industrial wastewater from factories and manufacturing processes; and agricultural runoff, which contains fertilizers and pesticides.

In space, astronaut wastewater is much more concentrated than Earth-based wastewater. It contains significantly higher levels of urea – a compound from urine – salts, and surfactants from soaps and materials used for hygiene. To make the water safe to drink, the system needs to remove all of these quickly and effectively.

The water recovery systems used in space employ some of the same principles as Earth-based water treatment. However, they are specifically engineered to function in microgravity with minimal maintenance. These systems also must operate for months or even years without the need for replacement parts or hands-on intervention.

NASA’s water recovery system captures and recycles nearly all forms of water used or generated aboard the space station. It routes the collected wastewater to a system called the water processor assembly, where it is purified into safe, potable water that exceeds many Earth-based drinking water standards.

The water recovery and treatment system on the ISS consists of several subsystems.

Recovering water from urine and sweat

The urine processor assembly recovers about 75% of the water from urine by heating and vacuum compression. The recovered water is sent to the water processor assembly for further treatment. The remaining liquid, called brine, still contains a significant amount of water. So, NASA developed a brine processor assembly system to extract the final fraction of water from this urine brine.

In the brine processor assembly, warm, dry air evaporates water from the leftover brine. A filter separates the contaminants from the water vapor, and the water vapor is collected to become drinking water. This innovation pushed the water recovery system’s overall water recovery rate to an impressive 98%. The remaining 2% is combined with the other waste generated.

An astronaut in a red shirt holds a small metal cylinder.
The filter used in brine processing has helped achieve 98% recovery. NASA

The air revitalization system condenses moisture from the cabin air – primarily water vapor from sweat and exhalation – into liquid water. It directs the recovered water to the water processor assembly, which treats all the collected water.

Treating recovered water

The water processor assembly’s treatment process includes several steps.

First, all the recovered water goes through filters to remove suspended particles such as dust. Then, a series of filters removes salts and some of the organic contaminants, followed by a chemical process called catalytic oxidation that uses heat and oxygen to break down the remaining organic compounds. The final step is adding iodine to the water to prevent microbial growth while it is stored.

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Koichi Wakata next to the International Space Station’s water recovery system, which recycles urine and wastewater into drinking water. As Wakata humorously puts it, ‘Here on board the ISS, we turn yesterday’s coffee into tomorrow’s coffee.’

The output is potable water — often cleaner than municipal tap water on Earth.

Getting to Mars and beyond

To make human missions to Mars possible, NASA has estimated that spacecraft must reclaim at least 98% of the water used on board. While self-sustaining travel to Mars is still a few years away, the new brine processor on the ISS has increased the water recovery rate enough that this 98% goal is now in reach. However, more work is needed to develop a compact system that can be used in a space ship.

The journey to Mars is complex, not just because of the distance involved, but because Mars and Earth are constantly moving in their respective orbits around the Sun.

The distance between the two planets varies depending on their positions. On average, they’re about 140 million miles (225 million km) apart, with the shortest theoretical approach, when the two planets’ orbits bring them close together, taking 33.9 million miles (54.6 million km).

A typical crewed mission is expected to take about nine months one way. A round-trip mission to Mars, including surface operations and return trajectory planning, could take around three years. In addition, launch windows occur only every 26 months, when Earth and Mars align favorably.

As NASA prepares to send humans on multiyear expeditions to the red planet, space agencies around the world continue to focus on improving propulsion and perfecting life support systems. Advances in closed-loop systems, robotic support and autonomous operations are all inching the dream of putting humans on Mars closer to reality.The Conversation

Berrin Tansel, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Florida International University

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

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