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News

California Department of Public Health names Drafting Guidelines Workgroup to advise state on COVID-19 vaccines

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 29 October 2020
Building on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement last week establishing a Scientific Safety Review Workgroup to advise the state on COVID-19 vaccines, Dr. Erica Pan, acting state Public Health officer, has named a group of California immunization, geriatrics, ethics, epidemiology, health equity, and pharmacy practice experts to the state’s COVID-19 Drafting Guidelines Workgroup.

This Workgroup will develop California-specific guidance for the prioritization and allocation of a COVID-19 vaccine.

The guidance will be based on several national frameworks from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID-19 vaccine supplies are expected to be limited initially.

The Drafting Guidelines Workgroup is part of the state’s initial COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan, which was submitted to the CDC on Oct. 16. Many vaccine candidates are in clinical trials currently, and California is putting a system in place for a safety review, prioritization, distribution and administration of vaccines as supply becomes available.

“Initial supplies of an approved vaccine will be limited and we know we will need to get them to our state’s front-line healthcare workers and others at highest risk, such as the most vulnerable living in nursing homes, first. The Drafting Guidelines Workgroup will help us make difficult decisions and guidelines about vaccine allocation and distribution both early on when the resources are scarce, and later as supplies increase. We want as much informed and broad input as possible to ensure allocation is done in a way that meets the needs of our state and that these choices are made with equity and with full transparency so everyone understands the allocation and distribution decisions,” said Dr. Pan.

California’s planning process for the eventual distribution and administration of COVID-19 vaccine is guided by the overarching principles of ensuring the COVID-19 vaccine meets safety requirements; ensuring that the vaccine is distributed and administered equitably, at first to those with the highest risk of becoming infected and spreading COVID-19; and transparency, by bringing in community stakeholders from the outset.

The members of the Drafting Guidelines Workgroup are:

· Co-Chairperson Oliver Brooks, MD, CMO, Watts Health Care Corp. and president, National Medical Association;
· Co-Chairperson Robert Schechter, MD, MPH, Chief, Immunizations Branch, CDPH;
· Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola, MD, PHD, professor of Clinical Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis and Founding Director of the Center for Reducing Health Disparities at UC Davis Health;
· Louise Aronson, MD, MFA, director, Age Self Care Program, UCSF and Clinical Lead, Senior Hub, San Francisco Department of Public Health Covid-19 Response;
· Randy Bergen, MD, Immunization Lead, Kaiser Permanente, Northern California;
· Arleen Brown, MD, co-lead investigator, Covid-19 California Alliance of STOP COVID-19 CA;
· Susan Ducore, RN, immunization lead, California Indian Health Service;
· Katherine Flores, MD, UCSF Fresno Latino Center for Medical Education and Research;
· Jeff Goad, PharmD., chair, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Chapman University;
· Claire Jarashow, PhD, MPH, epidemic intelligence service officer, Centers for Disease Control and acting director, Vaccine Preventable Disease Control and chief, Epidemiology and Data, Acute Communicable Disease, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health;
· Bernard Lo, MD, director, Program in Medical Ethics, UCSF, Emeritus and President, The Greenwall Foundation, New York;
· Ngoc-Phuong Luu, MD, health officer, Yuba and Sutter counties;
· Jeff Silvers, MD, immunization lead, Sutter Health;
· Melissa Thun, RN, Public Health nurse manager, San Diego County;
· Ann Walker, RN, PHN, Immunization program coordinator, Kern County Department of Health; and
· Mike Witte, MD, CMO, California Primary Care Association.

A Community Advisory Vaccine Committee will also provide input and feedback to the planning efforts and solve barriers of equitable vaccine implementation and decision-making.

Haunted Lake County plans COVID-safe and scary Halloween

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 28 October 2020
LAKEPORT, Calif. – While it’s felt like 2020 has had more tricks than treats, and has been plenty scary on its own, Haunted Lake County is returning for another year, undaunted by the challenges of COVID-19 and with plans for a bigger drive-thru event.

Wayne Yahnke, cofounder and treasurer of Haunted Lake County, said they are excited to put on a COVID-safe Halloween this year at the Lake County Fairgrounds, located at 401 Martin St. in Lakeport.

He said the drive-thru approach to scaring local residents received approval from Lake County Public Health.

It had its first run this past weekend and is ramping up for the finale, on Friday, Oct. 30, and Saturday, Oct. 31, Halloween night.

The event will take place from 5 to 10 p.m. both nights. From 5 to 6 p.m. is a less-scary hour for children. Adults are encouraged to come back for the show for mature audiences from 6 to 10 p.m.

On Halloween night, Yahnke said the Kiwanis Club has approval to deliver candy safely through the windows of vehicles using a PVC pipe.

Yahnke said the show this year includes the entire fairgrounds, with visitors to take a quarter-mile drive through the grounds. They’ll enter the carnival area at gate four and then be directed through the event, ultimately leaving through the main gate.

Last year, the event was threatened by public safety power shutoffs. But Yahnke said community members helped by providing generators and the show went off without a hitch.

“The power went off and nobody knew it,” he said. “We pulled off a haunted house last year with no power.”

Yahnke said it takes weeks to prepare and involves the work of up to 30 volunteers, ranging in age from 12 to 60.

“We normally start construction the weekend after Labor Day,” he said, but this year the schedule was delayed by at least a week due to Public Health approvals and other issues.

As part of getting approval from Public Health, Yahnke said they had to write up a four-page COVID-19 plan.

Once the six weeks of construction was under way, it was crunch time. “We’ve really had to reach hard to make this happen,” Yahnke said.

He said they’ve never done an event this large, and had to be even more creative than normal. One of the questions for them was how to scare people in their cars.

“We’ve come up with some pretty good stuff,” Yahnke said.

This year’s theme revolves around the fairgrounds, from the carnival to boat races to livestock, Yahnke said.

They’ve gotten support from Hillside Honda, JKL Construction, Kelseyville Lumber, Dave Furia and Furia Motorsports in getting cars, and Forrest Kuecker who transported the cars.

“The list goes on and on,” Yahnke said of the people and businesses that have stepped up to help.

This year, he said Haunted Lake County is asking for a minimum donation of $20 per car.

Haunted Lake County raised $6,000 last year that was donated to Operation Tango Mike, he said.

Yahnke said their beneficiary this year is the Lake County Fair Foundation, the nonprofit organization that supports the fairgrounds.

He said they are excited to be able to put on Halloween in some form and give families a way to avoid going out trick or treating.

They’re trying to promote the holiday as much as possible while keeping elements of safety, Yahnke said.

For more information, visit Haunted Lake County’s website and Facebook page.

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.

PG&E continues process of restoring power following public safety power shutoff

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 28 October 2020
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Pacific Gas and Electric said late Tuesday night that it had restored power to 97 percent of the 345,000 customers in 34 counties – including Lake – whose power had been turned off over the weekend due to red flag warning conditions.

The company implemented the public safety power shutoff, or PSPS – which began on Sunday morning in some parts of the region and on Sunday afternoon in Lake County – across a large swath of PG&E’s service area.

An initial partial all-clear had been called for Lake County on Monday, with about 5 percent restored on Monday night. PG&E told Lake County News at that time that the rest of the county was set to be restored by Tuesday night.

Due to continuing high winds and dynamic weather conditions that lasted overnight Monday and into Tuesday, the weather “all clear” notification for the remaining impacted areas was issued at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday, PG&E said.

Following this all clear, PG&E crews began power restoration efforts in areas still out of power.

Ahead of restoring power, PG&E follows a protocol that involves patrolling lines and electrical equipment for damage.

PG&E said its crews have patrolled more than 17,000 miles of transmission and distribution lines using 1,800 ground patrol units, 65 helicopters and one airplane.

As of Tuesday night, PG&E said it had received 130 reports of damage or hazards to equipment – such as downed power lines or vegetation on lines – due to the high winds that moved across the region, which it said could have led to wildland fires had the PSPS not occurred.

By Tuesday night, PG&E said more than 335,000 of the approximately 345,000 customers impacted by the PSPS had power restored.

PG&E mapping indicated that by Tuesday night Lake County had power restored, with all of its community resource centers closed, according to the company’s PSPS website.

The approximately 10,000 customers still without power on Tuesday night throughout the outage area can expect to have their power restored by noon on Wednesday, PG&E officials said in a Tuesday night briefing.

Mark Quinlan, PG&E’s incident commander, said that the company doesn’t expect another PSPS for the coming week and a half.

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.

Wind tests containment lines on August Complex South Zone

Details
Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 28 October 2020
A tree faller worker on the August Complex South Zone in Northern California. Photo courtesy of the US Forest Service.


NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Red flag conditions with strong wind gusts continued to test the containment lines on the August Complex South Zone this week.

The complex, which has been burning for two months after being started by lightning, remained at 1,032,648 acres on Tuesday, with containment at 93 percent, the US Forest Service reported.

It is burning in the Mendocino, Shasta-Trinity and Six Rivers National Forests.

The complex’s South Zone, which includes the Mendocino National Forest in northern Lake County, remained at 499,827 acres and 90 percent containment on Tuesday, the Forest Service said.

Additional personnel arrived at the South Zone Monday bringing the total number of people to 224. The Forest Service said 594 personnel are assigned to the complex as a whole.

Officials said the fire crews continue to focus on removing hazard trees, conducting fire suppression repair in priority areas and breaking down berms near containment lines.

On Monday, during the red flag warning, at times the northeast wind blew up to 40 miles per hour and the humidity dipped into the single digits, dropping as low as 1 percent at Mendocino Pass, the Forest Service reported.

The area of the fire that is not contained is in the Hellhole Canyon east of Covelo. This steep, dangerous terrain is not a safe place to have firefighters engaged directly with the fire, officials said.

Instead, the Forest Service said crews have worked to construct firelines on a ridge where suppression actions could be taken if it moved out of the Canyon. They have also been assisted by a helicopter dropping water on the fire when activity increases.

Throughout the duration of the August Complex, fire managers have been using distributed real time infrared, or DRTI, and fire imaging technology to support wildland firefighting operations and decision making, the Forest Service said.

Officials said DRTI is a packaged product which provides infrared video to frontline operators and near-real time perimeter maps to incident command planners. Point/spot detection in concert with high-resolution photographs make DRTI an effective detection tool.

The high altitude, high speed flight characteristics of the Air National Guard RC-26 aircraft provide the ability to fly detection missions over broad geographic areas. Wireless transfer of data from the aircraft facilitates transfer of information to ground units, according to the Forest Service report.

Utilizing the DRTI flights, firefighters can gather immediate information on heat signatures within the fire area. The Forest Services said the system can pinpoint heat signatures posing a threat to containment, allowing firefighters to quickly address those hazards and in turn decrease exposure to firefighters on the ground.
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  2. PG&E starts restoring power; partial all-clear called in Lake County
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