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COBB, Calif. – EcoArts of Lake County invites artists to apply for a spot in the 10th annual EcoArts: Lake County Sculpture Walk at the beautiful 107-acre Middletown County Trailside Park.

Temporary works with strong artistic merit made from and/or relating to nature will be chosen.

The sculptures will be sited along both sides of a three-eights of a mile central trail through meadows and woodland.

Submission applications must be received by March 15.

Approved works will be installed from Saturday, May 19, through Sunday, May 27, and be removed Sunday, Oct. 14, through Sunday, Oct. 21.

A large public reception will be held at the park on Sunday, June 10, from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m.

More than 270 sculptures by local, national and international artists have been installed over the past nine years with public attendance reaching over 3,000 people per exhibit.

EcoArts encourages local schools and community groups to apply and waives any fees for participation.

Visit www.EcoArtsofLakeCounty.org for information on the submission process and installation criteria. There is a $15 submission fee for each entry.

Applications and information also are available at the Lake County Arts Council’s Main Street Gallery, 325 N. Main St. in Lakeport.

Submissions and fees are due by Thursday, March 15, and will be acknowledged upon receipt.

Contact EcoArts directly for late submission information. Visit www.EcoArtsofLakeCounty.org, contact Karen Turcotte at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.">This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call 707-928-0323.

EcoArts of Lake County is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit arts organization dedicated to promoting visual art opportunities for the residents and visitors of Lake County, Calif.

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KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – On Wednesday the preliminary hearing for a Kelseyville man accused of assaulting his estranged wife and shooting her male companion last September got under way.

Andrew James Serrano, 39, is facing attempted murder, mayhem, assault with a firearm, spousal abuse, making terrorist threats, false imprisonment and special allegations for use of a firearm for the shooting of William Turner and an assault on Lesa Serrano that occurred on Sept. 10, 2011, at the Big Valley Road home the Serranos shared before they separated the previous April.

Serrano, wearing a jail jumpsuit and sitting alongside defense attorney Mitch Hauptman, was in Judge Richard Martin's Department 2 courtroom for the Wednesday proceedings.

Turner took the stand during the day of testimony, recounting how he was at the Big Valley Road home helping Lesa Serrano move furniture when Andrew Serrano arrived.

In the confrontation that followed, Turner said he was facing Serrano through a window in a door when Serrano raised a .40-caliber handgun and fired.

“At that point I couldn’t believe he was going to shoot me,” said Turner, who remembered looking down and seeing a 1-inch hole in his chest before reaching up and pulling the bullet’s metal jacket from the wound with his fingers.

In testimony on Wednesday it was alleged that about a month before the incident Andrew Serrano – who had restraining orders against him from his wife as well as two of her friends – had a friend buy him the .40-caliber Glock handgun and ammunition recovered from the scene.

The shooting also took place just two months after Andrew Serrano allegedly rammed his wife’s SUV with his pickup in Lakeport after circling a restaurant where she and two friends were eating, as Lake County News has reported.

In January 2011 Andrew Serrano allegedly had begun sending Turner texts and leaving angry voice mail messages telling him to stay away from his wife and children and accusing Turner of having an affair with Lesa Serrano, which Turner denied on the stand.

Sheriff’s officials recount arriving at the scene

Ahead of Turner, Deputy District Attorney Alan Upton called to the stand lead investigator Sgt. Mike Curran, Deputy Gary Frace and Sgt. Andy Davidson, who were the first to arrive on scene and have been credited with saving both Turner’s and Lesa Serrano’s lives.

It was Turner who called 911 to report the shooting. When Frace and Curran got to the house they found Andrew Serrano with a handgun. Curran and Frace drew their weapons and ordered Andrew Serrano to drop his weapon and get on the ground, which he did.

While Frace covered Andrew Serrano, Curran handcuffed him. As he was doing so, Andrew Serrano uttered a spontaneous statement, according to Curran, “Something like, 'He came at me.'”

Once Andrew Serrano was securely handcuffed, Frace would go to look for Turner, who was lying on his back in the garage doorway, and Lesa Serrano, who had a head injury and appeared to be in shock.

Frace said Lesa Serrano was bleeding badly from the head. She told him that Andrew Serrano had hit her with the pistol, punched her with his fist, attempted to strangle her and was dragging her to his vehicle when deputies arrived.

When Davidson arrived, he requested a REACH air ambulance, which flew Turner to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital. Curran, meanwhile, placed Andrew Serrano in the backseat of Deputy Carla Hockett's patrol car.

Hockett later transported Andrew Serrano to the sheriff's main office in Lakeport, where he refused to speak to a detective without his attorney, and instead was taken to the jail and booked. He was placed on suicide watch, according to statements in court.

During Curran’s testimony – the longest of the day – he said Lesa Serrano told him she and her husband had separated sometime around April 2011. The day of the shooting, she had asked Turner to go with her to pick up some furniture for her two sons as well as some other items.

Curran, as lead investigator, also was present during the surgery when a doctor pulled the bullet from Turner’s chest.

The surgeon told Curran that Turner had suffered “a significant injury” that was life-threatening. Curran called the wound a “through and through” shot to the lung, with the bullet going through the lung before lodging against a rib. Damage to the lung resulted in a “significant amount” of internal bleeding.

The surgeon told Curran that Turner was “a lucky man.”

Shortly after the shooting, Curran said Rob Brown – a county supervisor, bail bondsman and friend of Turner's – arrived at the home after receiving a phone call about the shooting. Curran said Lesa Serrano had refused to go to the hospital by ambulance, and Brown offered to drive her to the hospital.

In a followup interview Curran conducted with Brown on Sept. 12, 2011, Curran said Brown stated that Andrew Serrano's family had asked him to be the bail bondsman in the case, and he agreed, believing he would be able to keep tabs on Andrew Serrano and prevent him from “making a poor choice,” Curran said.

Andrew Serrano was required to check in with Brown daily to comply with the terms of his bail. Brown told Curran that he had warned Andrew Serrano to stay away from Turner due to concerns about the potential for a physical confrontation, as Andrew Serrano had told him he believed Turner and his estranged wife were having an affair. At the same time, Andrew Serrano also reportedly had a girlfriend.

Brown told Curran that he received a text message from Andrew Serrano the night before the shooting, stating he was not going to be at the high school football game in which his son was playing because he was having “an anger management issue” relating to Lesa Serrano. That same weekend Andrew Serrano was scheduled to have visitation with his two sons.

In addition to asking a friend to purchase the handgun and ammunition – telling the man he wanted the gun because of a recent break in at the Big Valley Road residence, which Curran said wasn’t found in sheriff’s records – Andrew Serrano had reportedly initiated an unusual conversation with a neighbor at the Lake County Fair, just a few weeks before the shooting.

The neighbor told Curran that Andrew Serrano approached him and said he might be hearing some gunshots around the Big Valley Road home in the coming weeks, but not to worry about it.

Another friend of Andrew Serrano’s told Curran that Serrano had texted him on at least two occasions with pictures of handguns and references to Lesa Serrano, with one of the texts saying she was going to disappear.

There also were indications that Andrew Serrano was using some kind of tracking to follow Lesa Serrano, as he always seemed to know where she was at, said Curran.

No direct evidence of GPS or other tracking was found, although Curran said Andrew Serrano’s friend who reported receiving the handgun texts said that everything Curran would want to know about that would be found on a computer belonging to Andrew Serrano which, by the time of the shooting, had been removed from the main home.

Recounting the confrontation

Turner, in his testimony, called Lesa Serrano his “best friend,” and recounted how she had come to him to ask about dealing with divorce. She also shared with him that her husband was becoming more violent, and was keeping her up arguing during the night.

Andrew Serrano had left him a phone message in the middle of the night in January 2011, telling Turner to stay away from Lesa Serrano. Turner said he called Andrew Serrano back the next day to tell him he had no idea what he was talking about.

“Obviously you don’t know me and you don’t know Lesa,” he said he told Andrew Serrano.

He said he would get another warning text from Andrew Serrano in May 2011.

At Lesa Serrano’s request, Turner took his pickup and a trailer and went to the Big Valley Road residence last Sept. 10 to move her sons’ dressers and beds and pick up some other household items.

Andrew Serrano arrived as Turner was in the middle of moving a dresser. “The family dog started whimpering and was cowering, hiding in the corner,” Turner said.

Turner said Andrew Serrano slid out of his truck, got into the back seat and reached for something. Lesa Serrano went out to talk to him and asked him to leave.

“At that point he spun around and slammed a clip into the gun,” said Turner.

Lesa Serrano ran into the house, hysterical. “I grabbed her by the shoulders and told her, ‘You need to calm down so we can make it through this,’” said Turner.

While he sent Lesa Serrano to hide in the home’s detached garage, Andrew Serrano came around to the back porch. “We were standing face to face,” said Turner, who was standing behind a door but looking through the door’s window at Andrew Serrano.

Andrew Serrano kept telling Turner to leave. Turner said he told Serrano he needed to move his truck first. Serrano repeated himself three times before raising the gun.

Turner leaned to the left, Serrano lowered the gun, repeated that he needed to leave, and after Turner said he would leave Serrano allegedly raised the gun again, this time shooting from about 18 inches away, according to Turner.

After he realized he had been shot, Turner said at first it felt like a pinch, he felt very warm and his arm was numb. Having done a tour in Desert Storm in the Marines, Turner said he knew he needed to stay calm and control the bleeding.

Andrew Serrano went at Turner again, telling him he shouldn’t be there, before going to find Lesa Serrano.

Turner used his cell phone to call 911, and then tried to find a weapon to help defend Lesa Serrano, who he heard screaming.

“I was scared out of my mind that he was just going to pull the trigger and shoot her right there on the spot,” Turner said.

He said Andrew Serrano had his estranged wife by the hair, and she was reaching up to push his hand and the gun away. Turner briefly passed out in the garage as he was trying to find some implement to use to defend them.

Help finally arrived, and Turner could hear the deputies telling Andrew Serrano to get down on the ground. He remembered Davidson – who he’d known since childhood – trying to stop the bleeding from his chest.

Turner said he was taken to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, where he was put into a security wing for his protection. While there he woke up to find a strange man standing by his bed. “All I could see was Andy at that point,” he said, with the duty nurse subsequently locking down the wing.

He said he continues to have anxiety and physical issues, and has worked little in his profession as a contractor since the shooting. Coaching wrestling also has been a challenge.

Turner is expected to continue testifying on Thursday morning. Upton estimated the remainder of the hearing could wrap up by the end of the day.

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it." target="_blank">This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Google+, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Arts Council will present its annual Winter Music Fest this weekend.

“Red, White and Blues – and All That Jazz” will be presented at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 11, and 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 12, at the Soper-Reese Community Theatre, 275 S. Main St., Lakeport.

Inspiration for the new format came from artist and dancer Diane Trebly-Stawicki, who will open the show with an original piece of music written by her mother, Margo, for her husband during World War II.

Trebly-Stawicki's parents were married in Honolulu on Dec. 7, and her father was immediately shipped overseas; and thus was born her song, “Home Free.”

With so many of of America's young people “over there,” the arts council wanted to recognize their service to us today, as well as the service of so many in conflicts past.

Hosting for the evening will be the mayor of Clearlake, the witty, gregarious and dapper Joey Luiz, with Cindy Strong directing the performance.

Performers will include talented pianist Andy Rosoff, with versatile musical styles ranging from New Orleans Jazz to mellow blues; Kathleen Escude, Cathy Mallow and Kathy O’Connell performing energizing numbers such as “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy”; Tom Xavier on guitar accompanied by Max Leyman on bass playing their original down home county songs; the versatile acoustics of Hilarie, Milton and Moe; Antoinette’s lively song and dance troupe with “Almost Like Being in Love”; the Mendo Singers with a patriotic medley of patriotic melodies; and show newcomers Kevin Village Stone and Lindy Day, offering a professional and unique musical style on a variety of instruments including acoustic and classical guitar, flute and more.

Reserved table seating and the first two rows of the lodge are available at the theater’s box office, 275 S. Main St. in Lakeport or 707-263-0577, on Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

General admission seating is $15 per person and available at the Travel Center located in the Shoreline Shopping Center in Lakeport and the Main Street Gallery in Lakeport at 325 N. Main St.

Tickets also can be purchased online at www.soperreesecommunitytheatre.com.

For more information on the program, call the Lake County Arts Council at 707-263-6658.

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MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Lowe’s Charitable and Educational Foundation has awarded a $5,000 Toolbox for Education grant to the Lake County International Charter School (LCICS) in Middletown for the full replacement of the roof on the main classroom building, the Langtry House.

LCICS is one of more than 585 schools or parent organizations to be awarded a Lowe’s Toolbox for Education grant for parent-initiated school improvement projects benefiting K-12 public education across the United States during the 2010-11 school year.

“Being awarded this grant has allowed us to completely replace the roof on our main building, a project that has needed to be done for several years,” said LCICS Director Gwendolyn Maupin-Ahern.

“The state budget cuts over the past few years have made it very difficult for small, public schools like LCICS to fit even necessary facilities projects like this into the budget, and we are so grateful for Lowe’s dedication to charitable giving,” Maupin-Ahern added.

The project was completed over one weekend in late January, the school reported.

“Lowe’s is committed to recognizing and supporting efforts that enrich the lives of our neighbors and customers,” said Marshall Croom, chairman of Lowe’s Charitable and Educational Foundation. “By supporting public schools like LCICS, we know we are contributing to a cause that’s important to our customers and employees and helping build stronger communities.”

Launched in partnership with PTO Today, a leading organization serving parent-teacher groups, the Toolbox for Education program has provided nearly $30 million through more than 6,000 grants since its inception in 2006. The grants have affected more than 3.7 million schoolchildren.

Grants are available to public schools in the United States for a wide range of improvement projects and large schools or school districts may be eligible to receive Toolbox grants up to $100,000 for school improvement initiatives.

All K-12 public schools in the United States are eligible. Parent groups may apply by visiting www.toolboxforeducation.com.

For more information about LCICS visit its Facebook page or Web site at www.lcics.org.

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COBB, Calif. – A backhoe reported stolen from the Moore Family Winery the week after Thanksgiving has been recovered.

Shortly after noon on Wednesday the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Dispatch Center received a call reporting the backhoe taken from the Moore Family Winery had been seen in the area of Harrington Flat Road and Sulphur Creek Road in Loch Lomond, according to Sgt. Steve Brooks.

The backhoe sighting was reported by a winery employee, Brooks said.

Brooks said the backhoe, which originally was orange in color, had been spray painted green.

Deputies responded to the area and, because of their diligence, were able to locate the backhoe, Brooks said.

He said the backhoe appeared to have been hidden in the brush on private property located on Rocky’s Point Road.

The Lake County Sheriff’s Office was assisted by the Department of Fish and Game and the California Highway Patrol assisted with the recovery, Brooks said.

Brooks said the backhoe later was returned to the Moore Family Winery.

This case is still under investigation, he said.

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A parole search conducted last weekend by the Lake County Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force resulted in two arrests and the seizure of methamphetamine, digital scales, packaging materials and 14 hypodermic needles.

Arrested following the search were 41-year-old Richard Lynn Parker of Lucerne and 33-year-old Lisa Therese Lundquist of Upper Lake, according to Sgt. Steve Brooks.

On Saturday, Feb. 4, at approximately 12:10 p.m., narcotics detectives and a sheriff’s narcotics detection K9 conducted a parole search on Parker at his Roland Drive home in Lucerne, Brooks said. Once inside the residence, detectives contacted Parker and Lundquist.

During a search of the outside of Parker’s residence, the narcotics detection K9 alerted on a vehicle belonging to Lundquist, Brooks said.

Once the K9 had access to the inside of the vehicle it alerted again on two lock boxes which were behind the front seat. Brooks said detectives opened the boxes where they located methamphetamine, several hypodermic needles, digital scales and packaging materials.

Brooks said Lundquist was arrested for possession of a controlled substance for sale, possession of a hypodermic needle and for being under the influence of a controlled substance, with bail set at $25,000, while Parker was arrested for being under the influence of a controlled substance, with his bail totaling $3,000.

Both Lundquist and Parker were transported to the Lake County Hill Road Correctional Facility and booked. Jail records indicated that both have since posted bail and been released.

The Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force can be reached through its anonymous tip line at 707-263-3663.

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The California Department of Fish and Game on Tuesday issued notice of its intent to sue the United States Army Corps of Engineers.

The Department of Fish and Game notified the Corps that it failed to comply with the federal Endangered Species Act when it adopted a national policy requiring the removal of virtually all trees and shrubs on federal levees.

The Corps reportedly developed its national levee vegetation removal policy in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

The action against the Corps alleges that its national policy fails to account for regional variations among levees. As early as 1955, the Corps encouraged and even required the planting of trees and shrubs on California levees.

Studies conducted in 1967, 1999 and 2008 by California confirm that native riparian vegetation are compatible with flood control and that such vegetation can often act to minimize damage during a flood event.

The Corps’ own studies from 1991 and 1999 reportedly confirm that post-damage flood rates for levees containing woody vegetation were lower than levees with no vegetation.

The Department of Fish and Game said it is confident that the Corps' flood concerns can be met in a regional variation allowing this unique riparian habitat.

Only 5 percent of the Central Valley’s original riparian forest remains and it would be required to be removed under the Corps’ policy, the Department of Fish and Game said.

In addition to providing scenic beauty and recreational enjoyment for people, riparian habitat is essential for several endangered species including Chinook salmon, Central Valley steelhead, Valley elderberry longhorn beetle, riparian brush rabbit, Western yellow-billed cuckoo and Swainson's hawk.

Approximately 1,600 miles of federal project levees along the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers and tributaries are likely to be affected by the Corps’ policy. Several miles of federal levees in the Bay Area and Southern California would also be affected.

In total, compliance with the policy is estimated to cost up to $7.5 billion and divert funds from more significant levee deficiencies like seepage and erosions.

Despite years of roundtable discussions between the Department of Fish and Game, the Corps and other state, federal and local entities, the Department of Fish and Game said its concerns over removing the riparian habitat remain unaddressed.

The state's suit would seek to have the Corps comply with the federal Endangered Species Act, the National Environmental Policy Act and the federal Administrative Procedure Act before further implementation of the levee vegetation removal policy.

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LOWER LAKE, Calif. – The service of a search warrant by the Lake County Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force last Saturday morning has resulted in one arrest and the seizure of methamphetamine, Oxycodone, digital scales and drug paraphernalia.

Detectives arrested 51-year-old Michael Vernon Ferrel of Lower Lake, according to Sgt. Steve Brooks.

Brooks said that on Jan. 25 narcotics detectives secured a search warrant for a residence and travel trailer located in the 9000 block of Highway 29 in Lower Lake.

At 7:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 4, detectives served the search warrant for the residence, Brooks said.

When narcotics detectives entered the home, three people were detained without incident, including Ferrel, according to Brooks.

During a search of the travel trailer detectives located three glass “meth” pipes, digital scales and packaging materials, Brooks said.

In the living room of the residence, detectives located methamphetamine and several Oxycodone pills. Brooks said it was determined that none of the people contacted in the residence had a prescription for Oxycodone.

Ferrel was arrested for felony possession of a controlled substance and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia, according to Brooks.

He was transported to the Lake County Hill Road Correctional Facility and booked, with bail set at $15,000. Ferrel remained in custody on Tuesday, according to jail booking records.

The other two detainees were released at the scene, Brooks said.

The Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force can be contacted through its anonymous tip line at 707-263-3663.

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LOWER LAKE, Calif. – The Anderson Marsh Interpretive Association said Tuesday it will postpone its seventh annual Old Time Bluegrass Festival as it works to negotiate with state officials on an agreement that would keep Anderson Marsh State Historic Park open.

AMIA wants to concentrate its efforts on preserving the park, which is on the list of proposed state park closures. If an agreement isn't reached, the park will close this July.

The organization currently is negotiating with the Department of Parks and Recreation to enter into an agreement to operate the park so that it may remain open and available to the public, as Lake County News has reported.

“The negotiation process is lengthy and complex,” said AMIA President Roberta Lyons. “AMIA's goal is for the park to continue to be open on weekends, and at other times for school field trips, tours and other AMIA events, including the popular Old Time Bluegrass Festival.”

Lyons added, “AMIA realizes it must focus now on doing what is necessary to successfully carry out our new responsibilities.”

The purpose of AMIA – the nonprofit cooperating association for the state park – is to support the park and provide interpretive and educational programs.

If approved, the agreement will require AMIA to become involved in park maintenance, keeping trails open and paying for utilities and other operating costs.

Lyons said the need to focus AMIA's energy on keeping the park open forced the group to make the hard but necessary decision to postpone the Old Time Bluegrass Festival – held each September – for one year.

“AMIA is very thankful to all of the Lake County businesses and individuals who have participated in and supported the Anderson Marsh Old Time Bluegrass Festival,” said AMIA Secretary Gae Henry.

“For six years the festival has been the main fundraiser for programs at Anderson Marsh Historic State Park and has been a premier Lake County event,” Henry said. “For now, AMIA volunteers are devoting their time and energy to creating an operating agreement which we hope will be approved by spring.”

AMIA Treasurer Henry Bornstein assured the public that if the group is granted the operating agreement, the Old Time Bluegrass Festival will be back in September 2013.

“It is a great event for Lake County and an important fundraiser for the park,” said Bornstein. “At this time, however, because of the uncertainty of the park's status, the time-consuming nature of the negotiations and the work that will have to be done to operate the park during the first year, we felt it was best to postpone the festival.”

For information about how you can get involved with AMIA's effort to save Anderson Marsh State Historic Park, please visit www.andersonmarsh.org or contact AMIA at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.">This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 707-995-2658.

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SACRAMENTO – On Tuesday the Governor's Office announced the appointment of a new tribal advisor and executive secretary for the Native American Heritage Commission.

Governor Jerry Brown appointed 54-year-old Cynthia Gomez of Sacramento to the position, which he established by executive order to bolster communication and collaboration between California state government and American Indian tribes.

The tribal advisor will serve as a direct link between the Governor’s Office and tribal governments on matters including legislation, policy and regulation.

Gomez has been the chief justice for the Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians Tribal Court since 2010.

She was assistant secretary of environmental justice and tribal governmental policy for the California Environmental Protection Agency from 2008 to 2010, chief of the Native American Liaison Branch for the California Department of Transportation from 1999 to 2008, and a housing and community development representative for the California Department of Housing and Community Development from 1989 to 1999.

Gomez is a member of the Tribal and State Court Forum for the California Administrative Office of the Courts and has served as chair of the Transportation Research Board’s Native American Transportation Issues Committee.

She received a juris doctorate degree from the University of Northern California, Lorenzo Patiño School of Law.

These positions do not require Senate confirmation and the total compensation is $140,000.

Gomez is a Democrat.

For more information about the tribal advisor executive order, visit http://gov.ca.gov/news.php?id=17222.

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SACRAMENTO – Assemblymembers Wesley Chesbro (D-North Coast) and Jared Huffman (D- San Rafael) have introduced new legislation to revive California’s ailing state parks system.

Assembly Bill 1589, the “California State Parks Stewardship Act of 2012,” proposes to reshape the relationship between state parks and state government and establishes a blueprint to stop park closures and ensure their long-term viability.

“The recent parks closures disproportionately impact rural California, and nowhere is that more true than on the North Coast,” Chesbro said. “The economies of many of our small communities depend on state parks and the millions of visitors they draw every year. We must find a way to keep them open, safe and accessible. This legislation creates lasting security for the California State Parks system and saves the state money in the long-term.”

Key provisions of AB 1589 include:

  • Encourages formation of a state compact that guarantees an ongoing level of state funding for operations and maintenance of state parks.

  • Creates a State Park Enterprise Fund to be used for construction and installation of modern revenue and fee collection equipment and technologies to increase park visitation and revenues.

  • Produces a California State Park environmental license plate that individual vehicle owners could purchase and have the fees go towards support of state parks.

  • Provides the option for taxpayers to voluntarily purchase an annual state park access pass when they file their state tax returns.

  • Requires the Department of Parks and Recreation to be more transparent on how it evaluates and selects specific parks for closure, and places a cap of 25 state park units on the number of park closures allowed from 2012 to 2016 without legislative approval.

“We have an opportunity with this legislation to not only prevent park closures, but to begin to reinvigorate our neglected California State Parks system,” Huffman said. “This bill is about charting a more sustainable approach to managing and financing our treasured state parks so that they will continue to be there for our economy and quality of life, and so that we can protect the valuable natural and cultural resources our parks contain.”

“Our local economy centers on visitor service and if we lose our only state park, Hendy Woods, every business in our community will be badly affected,” said Kathy Bailey, a member of the Anderson Valley Chamber of Commerce. “AB 1589 recognizes that closing parks should be the last choice, not the first, when trying to balance the budget. We’re very happy that the authors want the State to formulate common sense approaches to management reform and revenue enhancement before taking the drastic step of shuttering a vital component of our community’s economy.”

Assemblymember Roger Dickinson (D-Sacramento) is also a joint author of AB 1589.

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