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News

Governor distributes $50 million in grants to local communities to mitigate public safety power shutoffs

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 29 March 2021
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The governor has announced the distribution of $50 million in Community Power Resiliency grants through the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, or Cal OES, funds meant to protect local communities and vulnerable Californians from the impacts of utility-initiated power shutoffs.

“Even amidst a global pandemic, we continue to prepare our state for the natural and man-made disasters that may lie ahead,” said Gov. Newson. “These grants are part of our continued commitment to make sure that no Californian is left behind when disasters strike.”

This is the second round of public safety power shutoff resiliency grants from successive budget cycles proposed by the governor and supported by the Legislature.

In FY19-20, the Legislature approved the governor’s proposal to allocate $75 million in resiliency grants to counties, cities, tribes and state agencies.

Over these two budget cycles, counties have received $39 million, cities have received $23 million, tribes have received $4 million, state agencies have received $37.5 million and special districts have received $20 million.

This latest round of funds, allocated through the 2020-21 state budget, are designed to maintain the continuity of critical services that can be impacted by power outages, including schools, county election offices, food storage reserves and COVID-19 testing sites.

The funds are being distributed to 225 recipients, including all 58 counties, 51 incorporated cities, 20 federally recognized tribes and 96 special districts.

The state said the allocations include $13 million to counties, with allocations based on population and the counties required to use at least 50 percent of their award to support public safety power shutoff resiliency for one or more of the following priority areas – schools, elections offices, food storage reserves and/or COVID-19 testing sites.

Lake County will receive $183,393.

Cities also will receive $13 million, which the state allowing cities to apply for up to $300,000 on a competitive basis. Cities are encouraged to allocate funds to one or more of the following priority areas: schools, election offices, food storage reserves and/or COVID-19 testing sites. Neither of Lake County’s two cities are on the recipient’s list.

The state said $2.5 million has been allocated to California federally recognized tribes, with tribes allowed to apply for up to $150,000 on a competitive basis.

The Robinson Rancheria Citizens Business Council received $150,000.

Another $20 million will go to special districts that have an identified critical facility or facilities, or provide critical infrastructure, pursuant to the de-energization guidelines adopted by the California Public Utilities Commission. Funds also were awarded on a competitive basis to special districts, which were allowed to apply for up to $300,000.

Middletown Unified School District was the only special district in Lake County to receive grant funds. It was allocated $300,000.

Purrfect Pals: Two ready cats

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 29 March 2021
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control has two male cats awaiting adoption this week.

The following cats at the shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online at http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control.htm for information on visiting or adopting.

This young male domestic longhair cat is in cat room kennel No. 135, ID No. 14436. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control.

Male domestic longhair

This young male domestic longhair cat has a gray and white coat and gold eyes.

He is in cat room kennel No. 135, ID No. 14436.

This male domestic short hair cat is in cat room kennel No. 142, ID No. 14386. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control.

Male domestic short hair cat

This male domestic short hair cat has a black and white coat and green eyes.

He has been neutered.

He’s in cat room kennel No. 142, ID No. 14386.

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.

Lake County native wildflowers: Bee feast

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Written by: Karen Sullivan, Kim Riley and Terre Logsdon
Published: 28 March 2021
Photo Credit: Kim Riley.

Name: Lacy Phacelia (Phacelia tanacetifolia)
Family: Boraginaceae (Borage)
Common Names: Friend-Of-The-Bees, bee feast, blue tansy, scorpionweed

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Early springtime, windows down, what is that tantalizing scent along the Lake County section of State Highway 20 from Glenhaven to Lucerne?

Most likely, it is Lacy Phacelia (Phacelia tanacetifolia), which is found blooming along the Northshore in profusion typically beginning in early March through April.

Phacelia tanacetifolia is an attention-grabber not only for your eyes and nose, this wildflower native to Lake County and the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, is used in many places as a hedgerow on farms, as it attracts bees and other beneficial insects.

Planted in vineyards and alongside row crops with irrigation, it will continue to grow and flower into the summer months and is highly prized for its long, coiling flower clusters of nectar-rich flowers which open in sequence, giving a long flowering period that attracts not only native and European honey bees, it is also attracts to hoverflies (family Syrphidae), which are useful as biological pest control agents because they eat aphids and other pests.

Photo Credit: Terre Logsdon.

They also entertain the eyes of those driving along Highway 20 on the Northshore, interspersed with California poppies – the state flower.

This annual wildflower grows two to four feet tall, both in full sun or part shade, with fragrant flowers ranging from white to lavender to blue.

According to Judith Larner Lowry in her book, “Gardening with a Wild Heart,” “researchers in integrated pest management interplanted tansy-leaf phacelia with sugar beets. They found that sugar beet yields were significantly higher in plots grown with phacelia, possibly because adult syrphid flies, which feed on the floral nectar and pollen of phacelia,were significantly abundant. These syrphid flies were credited with reducing the aphids on the nearby sugar beets. Hoverflies as far as 200 meters from the planted phacelia were found with the characteristic blue, star-shaped phacelia pollen in their guts.”

Adding beneficial Lake County native wildflowers to your garden, vineyard, or orchard like Phacelia tanacetifolia is not only good for your crops – it is great for the native wildlife!

Nurseries where you can purchase seeds: https://calscape.org/nurseries.php?id=2875&showmap=1.

Terre Logsdon is an environmentalist, composter, and advocate for agroecology solutions to farming. An avid fan and protector of California wildflowers, plants, natural resources, and the environment, she seeks collaborative solutions to mitigate the effects of climate change. Kim Riley is retired, an avid hiker at Highland Springs, and has lived in Lake County since 1985. After 15 years of trail recovery and maintenance on the Highland Springs trails, she is now focused on native plants, including a native plant and pollinator garden on her property as well as promoting and preserving the beauty of the Highland Springs Recreation Area. Karen Sullivan has operated two nurseries to propagate and cultivate native plants and wildflowers, has lived in Kelseyville for the past 30 years, rides horses far and wide to see as many flowers as possible, and offers native plants and wildflowers for sale to the public. They are collaborating on a book, Highland Springs Recreation Area: A Field Guide, which will be published in the future. In the meanwhile, please visit https://www.facebook.com/HighlandSpringsNaturalists and https://www.facebook.com/HighlandSpringsRecreationArea.

Photo Credit: Karen Sullivan.

Invasive zebra mussels found in pet stores in 21 states

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Written by: UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
Published: 28 March 2021
In May of 2018, USGS Hydrologic Technician Dave Knauer found a batch of zebra mussels attached to the boat anchor in the St. Lawrence River in New York. Credit: John Byrnes, USGS. Public domain.

A citizen’s report of an invasive zebra mussel found in an aquarium moss package found in a pet store prompted a U.S. Geological Survey expert on invasive aquatic species to trigger nationwide alerts that have led to the discovery of the destructive shellfish in pet stores in at least 21 states from Alaska to Florida.

Amid concerns that the ornamental aquarium moss balls containing zebra mussels may have accidentally spread the pest to areas where it has not been seen before, federal agencies, states, and the pet store industry are working together to remove the moss balls from pet store shelves nationwide.

They have also drawn up instructions for people who bought the moss balls or have them in aquariums to carefully decontaminate them, destroying any zebra mussels and larvae they contain using one of these methods: freezing them for at least 24 hours, placing them in boiling water for at least one minute, placing them in diluted chlorine bleach, or submerging them in undiluted white vinegar for at least 20 minutes.

The decontamination instructions were developed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the USGS and representatives of the pet industry.

Zebra mussels are an invasive, fingernail-sized mollusk native to freshwaters in Eurasia. They clog water intakes for power and water plants, block water control structures, and damage fishing and boating equipment, at great cost. The federal government, state agencies, fishing and boating groups and others have worked extensively to control their spread.

In 1990, in response to the first wave of zebra mussel invasions, the USGS set up its Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, which tracks sightings of about 1,270 non-native aquatic plants and animals nationwide, including zebra mussels. State and local wildlife managers use the database to find and eliminate or control potentially harmful species.

The coordinator of the Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, USGS fisheries biologist Wesley Daniel, learned about the presence of zebra mussels in moss balls on March 2 and alerted others nationwide about the issue. Moss balls are ornamental plants imported from Ukraine that are often added to aquariums.

“The issue is that somebody who purchased the moss ball and then disposed of them could end up introducing zebra mussels into an environment where they weren’t present before,” Daniel said. “We’ve been working with many agencies on boat inspections and gear inspections, but this was not a pathway we’d been aware of until now.”

On Feb. 25, an employee of a pet store in Seattle, Washington, filed a report to the database that the employee had recently recognized a zebra mussel in a moss ball. Daniel requested confirming information and a photograph and received it a few days later.

Daniel immediately notified the aquatic invasive species coordinator for Washington State and contacted invasive species managers at the USGS and USFWS. He visited a pet store in Gainesville, Florida, and found a zebra mussel in a moss ball there. At that point federal non-indigenous species experts realized the issue was extensive.

The USFWS is coordinating the response along with the USGS. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, several state wildlife agencies and an industry group, the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, are also taking steps to mitigate the problem. National alerts have gone out from the USFWS, the federal Aquatic Nuisance Task and regional aquatic invasive species management groups. Reports of zebra mussels in moss balls have come from Alaska, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin, Washington and Wyoming.

“I think this was a great test of the rapid-response network that we have been building,” Daniel said. “In two days, we had a coordinated state, federal and industry response.”

The USGS is also studying potential methods to help control zebra mussels that are already established in the environment, such as low-dose copper applications, carbon dioxide and microparticle delivery of toxicants.

To report a suspected sighting of a zebra mussel or another non-indigenous aquatic plant or animal, go to https://nas.er.usgs.gov/SightingReport.aspx.

A moss ball sold in pet stores containing an invasive zebra mussel. USGS photo.
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