Tuesday, May 31, 2022

One Dead, Another Rescued After Hikers Swept into the Ocean

Posted By on Tue, May 31, 2022 at 11:00 AM

sheltercovefd.png
One hiker was killed and another was taken to the hospital Sunday after being swept into the ocean near the Black Sands Beach trailhead in Shelter Cove.

The Shelter Cove Fire Department ocean rescue unit was dispatched to the scene after a call came in around 2:45 p.m. reporting two people were in the water.

According to a news release, one of the hikers was treading water in rough wave conditions and the other individual was floating in the water about 50 to 100 yards offshore.

"The ocean rescue unit deployed a boat and jet ski from the marina and made the five-mile trek to the patients in rough 15-20 foot swells and whitecaps," the release states. "Both patients were transported back to the marina and awaiting Emergency Medical Technicians."

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Friday, May 27, 2022

Cal State Raises Issue with Cal Grant Expansion

Posted By on Fri, May 27, 2022 at 11:16 AM

An aerial view of the Cal Poly Humboldt campus. - PHOTO COURTESY OF CAL POLY HUMBOLDT
  • Photo courtesy of Cal Poly Humboldt
  • An aerial view of the Cal Poly Humboldt campus.
The campaign to expand free tuition to more low-income California students has been riding a wave of unanimous goodwill, despite its large costs. But the state’s — and nation’s — largest public university system has made public its concern that key trade-offs required for that expansion will be a financial burden for some middle-class students. 

Backers of the effort say those concerns are misplaced. How and whether lawmakers choose to respond will affect the fate of tens of thousands of prospective college students in California for years to come. 

Officials from the California State University Chancellor’s Office warned the Board of Trustees on Tuesday that while it projects a net increase of nearly 29,000 students overall who’ll receive the free-tuition grant, it would also see a decrease of roughly 39,000 future middle-class students — even as some 68,000 low-income students would be newly eligible for the grant. To be clear, if the Cal Grant expansion occurs as proposed, middle-class students currently receiving the award will continue to do so.

The information wasn’t necessarily new. Supporters of expanding the Cal Grant, the state’s chief financial aid tool that waives tuition or gives cash aid to roughly 500,000 Californians, have been transparent that some students would lose eligibility even as more would gain. But, while it has no formal position on expanding Cal Grant, Cal State’s packaging of the information was an inversion of the dominant narrative so far that Cal Grant expansion is a net win for students. 

At issue is Assembly Bill 1746, a bill championed by key lawmakers and a constellation of student advocacy groups. The bill passed the Assembly on Thursday unanimously and is endorsed by the California community college system, whose students would be the major beneficiaries of the bill. If passed and funded, another 150,000 students would get the Cal Grant, a ​result of the bill doing away with age and time-out-of-high school restrictions for university students and grade requirements for community college students. 

But that 150,000 figure is a net gain. Because the bill would lower the income eligibility ceiling, tens of thousands of middle-class students would suddenly be left without the Cal Grant – including the 39,000 Cal State undergraduates. For a family of four, the income ceiling would drop from around $116,000 a year to $73,000, university officials said.

Prominent drivers of the Cal Grant expansion effort argue university systems will have more than enough money from their own financial aid dollars to cover any funding gaps for middle-class students. That’s because by adding more students to the state financial aid program, that frees internal financial aid money for a system like Cal State to cover students who would have previously been eligible for Cal Grants.

Sensitivities are high.

Some backers of the Cal Grant expansion viewed this week’s presentation to the Board of Trustees — the governance body of the Cal State system — as unbalanced. The presentation focused too much on who’d lose out under Cal Grant without acknowledging the benefit to lower-income students currently ineligible for the Cal Grant, said Audrey Dow, senior vice president of Campaign for College Opportunity, an advocacy nonprofit in California.

Cal Grant expansion within the bill requires more than $300 million annually in state support. It’s a large sum that needs to be negotiated as part of the state budget by June 15 between lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom. Adding to the intrigue, Newsom vetoed a similar expansion of the Cal Grant last year despite unanimous support from the Legislature. 

Will Cal State’s concerns with the bill have a negative impact on those budget negotiations? “No,” wrote Assemblymember Jose Medina, a Democrat from Riverside and co-author of the bill. “Our hope is that the (public higher education system) segments will recognize the immense benefit that debt-free college will provide their students and their institutions,” Medina added in a written statement.

Architects of the bill say another financial aid expansion — Middle Class Scholarship 2.0 — will eventually cover that eligibility gap. But that wouldn’t be true until the state commits enough money to fully fund that program, which won’t happen this year. The state this year plans to put a $632 million down payment of the scholarship. Fully funding it — and thereby covering the eligibility gap left by the proposed changes to the Cal Grant — would cost the state an additional $2 billion annually. 

“The CSU believes that any modernization of the Cal Grant program should do no harm,” said Eric Bakke, interim assistant vice chancellor for advocacy and state relations at Cal State, during the Trustees meeting Tuesday.

Another author of the Cal Grant expansion bill, Assemblymember Kevin McCarty, a Democrat from Sacramento, said in a statement that “Cal Grant reform and expanding the Middle Class Scholarship is the correct pathway to debt-free college in California.” He added that lawmakers will “make both work in tandem, and the very few students who’ll end up not being eligible for the Cal Grant will be supplemented through the Middle Class Scholarship.”

Backers of the Cal Grant expansion say the Cal State system isn’t telling the whole story. The Cal State also operates a $700 million financial aid grant — called the State University Grant — that Cal Grant expansion advocates say could be used to cover the expenses for the middle-class students left out of the bill.

“I don’t think that it was a full representation of what the bill can do,” said Isaac Alferos, the outgoing head of the Cal State Student Association, which represents university students and is a key supporter of the Cal Grant expansion bill.

Under the Cal Grant expansion plan, Cal State students would receive $83 million more annually than they collectively do now at full implementation, according to data provided by the California Student Aid Commission. That’s even after accounting for the fact that the plan would get rid of a roughly $1,650 non-tuition award to cover portions of living expenses that goes to almost 114,000 Cal Grant recipients at Cal State today.

CalMatters asked the Cal State Chancellor’s Office for a breakdown of how the university’s $700 million grant would fare if the Cal Grant expansion passes, but the system didn’t provide one. Instead it offered a statement from Noelia Gonzalez, the system’s interim director of financial aid. Cal State “does not oppose Assembly Bill 1746,” she wrote, and that “we will certainly revisit our policies” if Cal Grant expansion has an impact on the university grant.

At least one Cal State Trustee homed in on the missing state university grant data. “I would have loved to see more numbers from the presentation that proposes a (State University Grant) plan along with the Cal Grant plan if passed,” said outgoing student Trustee Krystal Raynes in an interview. If there is more pressure on the university grant, the Cal State system could ask the state for more funding, she added.

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Thursday, May 26, 2022

HumCo Planning Director Headed to Fort Bragg

Posted By on Thu, May 26, 2022 at 5:02 PM

Humboldt County Planning Director John Ford walks the board through changes to the cannabis ordinance. - SCREENSHOT
  • Screenshot
  • Humboldt County Planning Director John Ford walks the board through changes to the cannabis ordinance.
Humboldt County Planning and Building Director John Ford has informed the Board of Super visors he will be leaving his post next month and is expected to start work as the city manager of Fort Bragg in July.

Ford, who stepped into the role in 2016, has helmed Planning and Building through a tumultuous period, overseeing implementation of the county's land use ordinance governing recreational cannabis cultivation and all the complexities that has entailed.

He will now head south to take over the post vacated by new Humboldt Chief Financial Officer Tabatha Miller last December, picked from 15 applicants to fill the city manager position in the small coastal town of about 7,200.

According to a press release from Fort Bragg, Ford was among four finalists who underwent interviews wit hate city council, and he was the "unanimous choice."

Ford's last day with the county of Humboldt is expected to be June 24 and he's slated to start in Fort Bragg on July 5.
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Court: Time to Mask Back Up

Posted By on Thu, May 26, 2022 at 1:20 PM

Citing an increase in confirmed COVID-19 cases locally, the Humboldt County Superior Court has reinstated rules requiring face masks be worn in all county courtrooms and the Jury Assembly Room used for jury selection.

The new rule went into effect yesterday.

The court also reminds anyone due to appear in court who is symptomatic — with a fever, cough, cold or other symptoms — to contact their attorneys and make arrangements for their hearings to be rescheduled, or to appear remotely via phone or video conferencing.

Find the court's full press release copied below.


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Interior to Open Offshore Wind Comment Period Next Week

Posted By on Thu, May 26, 2022 at 1:12 PM

Hywind floating turbine demo off the coast of Karmøy, Norway. - COURTESY OF STATOIL
  • Courtesy of Statoil
  • Hywind floating turbine demo off the coast of Karmøy, Norway.

The U.S. Department of the Interior announced today that it will publish a Proposed Sale Notice next week, opening a 60-day public comment period on plans to open lease areas off the California coast — including one off Humboldt Bay — to bidding for the creation of offshore wind farms.

"The Biden-Harris administration is moving forward at the pace and scale required to help achieve the president's goals to make offshore wind energy a reality for the United States," Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said in a press release announcing the move forward with what would be the first-even offshore wind lease sale on the United States' West Coast. "Today, we are taking another step toward unlocking the immense potential of offshore wind energy (off) our nation's west coast to help combat the effects of climate change while creating good-paying jobs."

The proposed notice of sale (PNS) is slated to post May 31 and will provide detailed information about the proposed lease areas, proposed provisions and conditions, and details of the auction. Today's press release notes potential stipulations that would give preference to bidders who pursue community benefit agreements with surrounding communities and ocean users (commercial fishing fleets are mentioned specifically), those who will commit to investing in training an offshore wind workforce and those who engage with tribes and underserved communities "in a manner that minimizes and mitigates their projects' adverse effects."

Comments received on the document during the 6o-day period will be considered before the bureau of Ocean Energy Management dices whether to publish a final sale notice, which would include a time and date for the sale and a list of companies qualified to participate.

Find the full Interior Department press release copied below and past Journal coverage of offshore wind here.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2022

HumCo Reports Another COVID Death as Hospitalizations Rise

Posted By on Wed, May 25, 2022 at 5:00 PM

Humboldt County Public Health reported today that the county has confirmed another COVID-19 deaths since its last report May 18, a resident over the age of 80.

Five new hospitalizations were also reported today but, according to a state database, 15 people are currently hospitalized with the virus locally, including three under intensive care. The death reported today is the 147th in Humboldt County since the pandemic began.

Find the full public health press release, which includes a schedule of upcoming vaccination clinics, click here.
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Two Suspected Opioid Overdoses in HumCo Jail; 20 Grams of Suspected Heroin Found in Cell

Posted By on Wed, May 25, 2022 at 3:08 PM

Two Humboldt County jail inmates were saved by correctional officers after suspected opioid overdoses, the Humboldt County Sheriff's Office announced in a press release today.

On Monday night, correctional officers administered Naloxone, a nasal spray commonly used to counter decreased breathing caused by an opioid overdose, to two female inmates housed in the same cell after they were found unresponsive and showing signs of a possible opioid overdose.

Both inmates were later transported to a local hospital for further treatment and are expected to recover.

"By quickly responding and administering the life-saving medication, correctional deputies effectively saved both inmates’ lives," the release states.

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Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Candy Stockton Named Humboldt's New Public Health Officer

Posted By on Tue, May 24, 2022 at 4:42 PM

Humboldt County's new Public Health Officer Candy Stockton. - HUMBOLDT COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH
  • Humboldt County Public Health
  • Humboldt County's new Public Health Officer Candy Stockton.
Humboldt Independent Practice Association Chief Medical officer Candy Stockton has been confirmed by the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors to serve as Humboldt County's Public Health Officer. She is slated to begin the new post  July 18.

“Having spent years practicing medicine in rural Northern California has given me a deep understanding of the challenges inherent in medicine and community health in rural and isolated areas,” Stockton said.

Stockton, a fourth-generation Humboldt County resident, replaces Ian Hoffman, who stepped down as Humboldt County Public Health Officer in March.

Stockton received her medical degree from Loma Linda University School of Medicine and is board certified in family and addiction medicine. She served as the medical director for Shingletown Medical Center in Shasta County for nine years, and for the past five years has served as the chief medical officer for the Humboldt IPA in Eureka. Stockton is also involved in advancing treatment for substance use disorders with a focus on pregnant and parenting individuals at the statewide level, and is also a trainer and consultant for the national Opioid Response Network and a contributing member of the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative’s Mother & Baby Substance Exposure Initiative Toolkit.

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Fortuna Nursing Home COVID Outbreak Expands to 36 Infected

Posted By on Tue, May 24, 2022 at 4:04 PM

Humboldt County Public Health is continuing to provide a heightened response to a COVID-19 outbreak at the Fortuna Rehabilitation and Wellness Center in which 26 residents and 10 staff members have tested positive for the virus, with one resident currently hospitalized. 

Public Health's Communicable Disease team is testing residents and staff three times a week and is coordinating with the California Department of Public Health's Healthcare-Associated Infections Group.

The outbreak began Friday when 12 people tested positive for the virus.

Fortuna Rehabilitation and Wellness Center is a 104-bed facility with 56 residents and 70 staff members. The release states that management is currently working to backfill staff who have tested positive.

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Protecting the Titans: New Trail Provides Safe Access to Ancient Grove

Posted By on Tue, May 24, 2022 at 3:33 PM

The railings on this bridge were hand-rounded by trail crews, who hand-carried in almost 128 tons of building materials. - CARLY WIPF
  • Carly Wipf
  • The railings on this bridge were hand-rounded by trail crews, who hand-carried in almost 128 tons of building materials.
A once hidden trail blazed off the beaten path is now a formal North Coast attraction.

Today, if you walk along the Mill Creek Trail in Del Norte County’s Grove of the Titans, you’ll tread on raised metal walkways that allow water to flow and ferns to grow beneath your feet. You’ll cross a wooden bridge, climb perfectly placed stairs and duck through nature-made tunnels of green, all the while taking in a striking view of some of the world's tallest trees.

But it wasn’t always this way.

Before it reopened with ribbon-cutting ceremony May 21, the area around the Mill Creek Trail — a 3-mile path that weaves through Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park in Redwood National and State Parks (RNSP) — was largely untouched.

The rise of social media over the past two decades meant more and more locals and tourists spread the word about the lauded grove. A network of informal, secret trails formed and visitors trampled over the ferns and undergrowth to marvel at the beauty of the giant trees. But this came at a significant cost to the giant trees.

Redwood root systems were damaged and plants on the forest floor died. Foot traffic eroded soil and pushed litter into the streams, putting a strain on coho and steelhead spawning areas.

“It is our duty to protect our resources — we needed to protect this grove, but we also wanted to allow people to access it because it is a pretty significant experience,” said Erin Gates, deputy superintendent for Redwood National and State Parks and California State Parks North Coast Redwood District. “What we were able to do is realign Mill Creek Trail, build an elevated walkway so visitors are able to experience this grove without letting their footprints do damage that is irreversible.”

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