THE ECONEWS REPORT: Tell FERC That Eel River Dams Gotta Go!
The EcoNews Report / Today @ 10 a.m. / Environment
Cape Horn Dam at Van Arsdale Reservoir. Photo: PG&E.
This week on the EcoNews Report, we’re excited to share that the comment period for Eel River dam removal has finally opened! Tune in to hear co-hosts Tom Wheeler of EPIC and Alicia Bales of the Redwood Chapter of the Sierra Club talk with Alicia Hamann of Friends of the Eel River about this important moment.
The Wild and Scenic Eel River offers an unparalleled opportunity to restore native fish populations. With vast, high-quality habitat protected in wild landscapes and fish that retain their wild genetics, dam removal will reconnect hundreds of miles of prime spawning and rearing habitat, restore natural sediment flow, reduce methylmercury buildup, and improve downstream water quality.
Taking down the Eel River dams is the single most important step toward recovering the river’s once-abundant salmon, steelhead, and lamprey runs. Supported by Tribes, fishers, recreationists, and conservation groups, the Free the Eel movement invites everyone to help heal a century of harm and restore this iconic river.
Learn more and find information about upcoming comment workshops and instructions for submitting comments at eelriver.org.
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Humboldt County Superior Court Calendar: Yesterday
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HUMBOLDT HISTORY: From Troublemaking Eureka Scamp to West Point Cadet to Leader in the Fight Against Pancho Villa — One Eureka Veteran’s Life In and Out of the Service
Jack L. Silvey / Today @ 7:30 a.m. / History
Thomas Monroe second from left, is shown with fellow officers in 1914 at’ Camp Cotton, El Paso, Texas, where men and materials were assembled under General Pershing for the campaign against Pancho Villa. Photos via the Humboldt Historian.
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Col. Thomas H. Monroe, Sr. will mark his 95th birthday on April 28. Those many years have special meaning to a man who spent the prime of his life away from home but never lost touch with his deep roots in Humboldt County.
His devotion to the nation spanned the two major wars and service under Generals John J. Pershing and Douglas MacArthur. This same spirit of service was devoted to civic projects in his home community after retirement from the military.
He traces his Humboldt County heritage back to the Albee family, early settlers who came overland from the Midwest. His great-grandfather, Joseph Albee, settled on a ranch in the Redwood Creek area in 1852 and was killed by Indians in 1862. Joseph Albee’s daughter, Ann, married Col. Monroe’s grandfather, Welton Alanzo Monroe. The Colonel’s father, Alanzo Judson Monroe, was born at Hydesville in 1858 and his mother, Lucretia Huntington, was born at Rockford, Ill.
The Albee name was ever present in Col. Monroe’s youth. George Albee, his great uncle, taught him chemistry at Eureka High School. George later became superintendent of schools and the high school’s Albee Stadium was named in his honor.
Col. Monroe likes to tell a story involving his grandfather, Charles A. Huntington, who was a Congregational Church minister. While serving as an Indian Agent and teacher at Neah Bay, Wash., Huntington told a group of Native Americans about the Biblical account of the flood brought on by 40 days and 40 nights of rain. One of his listeners replied, “It rains here 90 days and 90 nights and we’re not flooded out.”
The Monroe name carries with it the traditions of longevity and military service. Col. Monroe’s brother was Brig. General Hammond McDougal Monroe, who died on Jan. 25, 1985 at the age of 91. The Colonel’s two sons are Col. Thomas H. Monroe, Jr., who lives in Eureka, and Col. Putnam Waldner Monroe of Austin, Texas. All four men graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
Col. Monroe was born in Eureka on April 28, 1890 in a cottage at Del Norte and E streets, the site of the present First Baptist Church. He remembers that the one-story cottage had the distinction of being a “highrise” with a number of steps leading to the entrance.
This was because the house was built over huge redwood stumps and blasting talent had not been available for their removal prior to construction.
Growing up in early-day Eureka left him with a number of other vivid childhood memories:
Like the time, at age 4, when something came over the backyard fence while he was in the yard with his mother. The family bulldog picked up the object before he could get to it. It was food laced with strychnine and the dog died.
Or the time when Henry Way, pond tender for the Occidental Mill, fished out a large octopus.
Then there was the organ concert at church when, at age 14, he was charged with the responsibility of pumping the leather bellows. At a point in a selection when all stops were open, the bellows broke. At first the organist thought he had “goofed off,” and it was all pretty tense until the truth emerged.
His first taste of schooling came as a 5-year-old when he attended a kindergarten school operated at D and 6th streets by Mrs. Henry Way, wife of the Occidental Mill pond tender.
From there he attended elementary grades at the one-room Lincoln School, Grant School, Brown School and Pioneer School. He recalls that some teachers were strict on discipline and “if you got a licking at school you would get a licking at home.” In one of the more exciting schoolroom incidents at Pioneer School, a male teacher lost his patience and started to pull young Monroe out the door. The student clung to a desk and finally both boy and desk went tumbling outside. The colonel recalls that this incident led to a request that he apologize to the teacher and apologize he did.
He was sent to a preparatory school at Portland, Oregon, for a year in 1906 and returned to get his high school education at Winship School. He graduated from Winship, Eureka’s first high school, in 1909.
He was elected student body president at the high school and played on the football team. “In those days we used a donated football and furnished our own playing equipment.”
Memories of high school include the building of a tennis court with a wood surface, membership in the Sequoia Yacht Club, where students could swim in a pool built of timbers and caulked like a ship’s hull, and summer work experiences.
During the summer of 1907, he worked in a sash-and-door factory at Samoa. The next summer he joined two friends on a pack trip into the Klamath River country, and in the summer of 1909 he got a job with a relocation survey crew working in the Eel River canyon for the Northwestern Pacific Railroad.
In December of 1909, he took a competitive examination for West Point at University of California at Berkeley. An entrance test followed in January, and he entered West Point in the class of 1914 on March 1. His sponsor was Congressman Englebright of Grass Valley.
A memorable event in his cadet years was being in attendance at the inauguration of President Woodrow Wilson following his election in 1913. The ceremony gave him an unexpected glimpse of a dashing second lieutenant in the cavalry who had graduated from West Point in 1909 and was to become General George S. Patton. At the inauguration, Patton, on horseback, had words with an unauthorized man who had taken over the speaker’s podium. The man wouldn’t move until Patton finally threatened him at close range with his saber.
After graduating from West Point, Col. Monroe’s first assignment as a second lieutenant in the infantry was at El Paso, Texas, with General John J. Pershing. It was here, at Camp Cotton, that Pershing was assembling troops and material for the much publicized punitive expedition against the notorious Francisco (Pancho) Villa, Mexican bandit and revolutionary. The action was ordered by President Wilson after Villa’s band raided Columbia, New Mexico in 1916 and killed a number of American citizens.
It was at El Paso that Col. Monroe asked General Pershing for a month’s leave to marry his fiancee, Clara Waldner, in Eureka. The general said “no,” but allowed a three-day leave. The bride-to-be hurriedly traveled by train to El Paso, and the wedding took place on March 27, 1915.
The bride soon returned home and the groom went on to Columbia, New Mexico and the jumping off base for the expedition into Mexico. Col. Monroe was made adjutant of a motor truck battalion of 1,100 vehicles. It was the battalion’s job to supply the troops engaged in the pursuit of Villa.
President Wilson had ordered that Villa be captured dead or alive, and the expedition trailed the renegade for 11 months from March, 1916 to February, 1917, but failed in its objective. World War I was at hand, and in this same year Pershing was appointed commander in chief of the American Expeditionary Force in France.
Col. Monroe returned to the Sixth Infantry Regiment at El Paso and was then assigned to an officers’ training camp in Tennessee. His regiment became part of the 54th Infantry, and he became a battalion commander. He was sent overseas from New York in July, 1918, and landed at Liverpool, England. From there, his outfit went on to Winchester, England and Le Havre, France.
He recalls, “We were known as the ‘Sightseeing Sixth’ because we marched all over France and never got into a serious battle.”
But it wasn’t all that easy. There is the memory of battling large rats in the trenches, being hospitalized with dysentery and viewing the Verdun battlefields where reminders of the recent dead lay all about. It was at Verdun that a million men died in the bloodiest battle of World War I.
After the Armistice and his return to New York, Col. Monroe came home to Eureka on leave before reporting for a two-year assignment with the ROTC at the Georgia Military Academy. Then came a one-year stint at Georgia Tech, followed by one year of duty as head of the ROTC in the Fourth Corps Area in Atlanta.
Other assignments included the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, temporary duty with the Chemical Warfare Corps at Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland, organizer of the Chemical Welfare Board for the Army and service as secretary of the board for three years.
In 1929, Col. Monroe was transferred back to the infantry and assigned the Philippine Command at Fort McKinley. It was here that he became acquainted with General Douglas MacArthur. After knowing and working with a number of generals. Col. Monroe rates MacArthur the “greatest general of modern times.”
In 1930, Gen. MacArthur put Col. Monroe in command of Camp Baguio, a Philippine resort of 250 rooms for Army and Navy personnel. A year later, the colonel was sent to the Army War College in Washington, D.C., for more study.
In 1932, Gen. MacArthur ordered him to Fort Benning, but that order was canceled. Instead, Col. Monroe was assigned to the War Department’s general staff under Gen. MacArthur to work in the British Empire Section G2 (intelligence).
In 1936, he was sent to Oakland as an instructor for the California National Guard, a duty he remembers as “pleasant with a lot of good friends.” World War II brought him the assignment of antitank officer with the Sixth Army in June of 1942. In September of that year he took command of the 15th Infantry, a part of the Third Division at Fort Lewis, Washington. From Fort Lewis he went to Fort Ord near Monterey, to Camp Prickett, Virginia, and then to North Africa on November 7, 1942, where he served in an area from Casablanca to Tunis.
In July, 1943, he was ordered back to the U.S. to serve as instructor at the Army-Navy Staff School, Washington, D.C., where he headed the Intelligence Section.
After his retirement from the Army on May 1,1946, Col. Monroe returned to Eureka and devoted his time and talent to civic affairs. He served as public relations director for the Eureka Chamber of Commerce and Civil Defense director for the county. He received a state appointment as director of civil defense for the entire North Coast District. He has always shown a keen interest in community history and is a member and past president of the Humboldt County Historical Society.
The Colonel has four grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. His wife died in 1976.
His home is in a scenic wooded section of Monroe Lane in the Redmond Road area of Eureka. He retains a lively interest in the community, in reading and in corresponding with his many friends. Two hobbies in his retirement years have been fishing and gardening. He says, “I can’t do much of that anymore, but I still have a martini every night at five.”
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The story above was excerpted from an article originally printed in the March-April 1985 issue of The Humboldt Historian, a journal of the Humboldt County Historical Society, and is reprinted here with permission. The Humboldt County Historical Society is a nonprofit organization devoted to archiving, preserving and sharing Humboldt County’s rich history. You can become a member and receive a year’s worth of new issues of The Humboldt Historian at this link.
OBITUARY: Evo Frank Fanucchi, 1920-2025
LoCO Staff / Today @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Evo Frank
Fanucchi
September
22, 1920-October 18, 2025
A rough and tumble Italian boy, grew up in Eureka. He sold newspapers at brothels, played stick ball with gangsters and helped his parents run a barely legal establishment.
He joined the US Navy construction battalion during World War II, proudly serving his country as a Seabee.
Returning home, he began a long career as bartender and co-owner of Roy’s Italian restaurant.
A frugal do-it-yourselfer, Evo could lay brick, pour cement and fix just about anything mechanical. He only really got “old” after the age of 103!
Evo is survived by his wife Catherine, who he met in 1974; his daughter Tina Grenamyer-Nickles, who lives in Fallon, Nevada; her sons Keith, Monte and Lance and their children. He also leaves behind his nephew Joe Fanucchi and his children — Lisa, Teri, Brett, Angela and Julie — and his niece Nina Crowe and her children, Zack and Alex. He was preceded in death by his parents, Angelo and Teresa; his brother Roy Fanucchi; and his sister Ida Newell.
There will be a gathering at the Elks Lodge from 1 to 3 p.m. on November 16 for an Honor Guard Ceremony.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Evo Fanucchi’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here.
OBITUARY: Emily Becker (Peterson), 1974-2025
LoCO Staff / Today @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Emily Becker (Peterson) passed away peacefully, surrounded by her loved ones, on Saturday, September 13, 2025, after a courageous six-year battle with breast cancer.
Born on July 12, 1974, in Humboldt County, Emily spent her entire life in the place she loved most. She attended Cutten Elementary, Winship Junior High, and graduated from Eureka High School in 1992. During high school, she excelled at volleyball but chose to devote her junior and senior years entirely to showing her beloved horse, Cricket. Given to her at the age of eight, Cricket became Emily’s lifelong best friend and partner. Together they competed throughout Humboldt County, ultimately winning the California State Horsemen’s Association (CSHA) statewide championship in 1992 — a title no other Humboldt County rider has achieved.
After high school, Emily attended Humboldt State University, where she earned her degree in Natural Resources Interpretation in 1997. Following graduation, she fulfilled her dream of becoming a California State Park Ranger after completing training at the California Police Academy in Asilomar. Emily was proud to serve as a Park Ranger at Humboldt Redwoods State Park, a place that held her heart. She was known for her engaging campfire programs, guided hikes, and dedication to running Cuneo Creek Horse Camp. She also led the Mounted Assistance Unit, blending her love of horses with her commitment to public service.
Emily’s compassion extended to all animals — she rescued countless dogs, cats, and even horses throughout her life. She had a generous spirit, never missing a loved one’s birthday and often gifting roses from her own garden.
In December 2007, Emily met the love of her life, Kristofer Becker. Together, they built a beautiful family, welcoming their children, Tabitha and Isaac, who became the center of her world. Emily devoted herself to motherhood, cheering on her kids at every activity, planning family adventures, and creating lasting memories through their many travels and camping trips. She loved cooking for her family and was, by all accounts, one of the best around.
Emily will be remembered for her warmth, her strength, her devotion to family and animals, and her deep love of nature and the redwoods that surrounded her home.
Emily is survived by her husband, Kris Becker, and their two children, Tabitha and Isaac Becker; her mother Robin Haynes and stepfather Chris Haynes; her father Jay Peterson; her sisters Erin Peterson and Cyndi Fischer; her brother Jamey Fischer; her parents-in-law Gerrie and Hannes Becker; her sister-in-law Sonja Becker; her brother-in-law Erik Becker; and many beloved cousins, aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews.
A celebration of Emily’s life will be held this summer. In lieu of flowers, donations in Emily’s memory may be made to a favorite animal rescue, Hospice of Humboldt, or a California State Park that holds special meaning.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Emily Becker’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here.
OBITUARY: Wai Yan Leamon, 1977-2025
LoCO Staff / Today @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Wai Yan Leamon was born in British Hong Kong. From birth her mother was unable to care for her, so she lived in a children’s home in Hong Kong. When she was 10 years old, she was adopted by Richard and Sue Leamon and came to join her new sister and brother, Heather and Forrest, in rural Potter Valley, California. She quickly adapted to country life raising and showing animals in 4-H and playing soccer and baseball. She graduated from Potter Valley Elementary School and Ukiah High School. She also attended Mendocino Community College, where she studied history and anthropology.
Although she had a playful and sweet demeanor, most of her adult life was eclipsed by mental illness. Cancer took her life in Eureka.
Wai is survived by her mother Sue Leamon and her sister Heather Glaser (Ben), her niece Rayah and nephews William (Antonia), Alan, Andrew and Luke Leamon. She was predeceased by her father Richard and brother Forrest Leamon (Ana). A private family graveside service is pending.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Wai Yan Leamon’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here.
Convicted Felon Arrested in McKinleyville After Attempting to Toss Illegal Firearms Into Bushes While Evading Deputy, Says HCSO
LoCO Staff / Yesterday @ 1:43 p.m. / Crime
Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office release:
On Nov. 6, 2025, at about 11:15 p.m., Humboldt County Sheriff’s deputies assigned to the McKinleyville area were on patrol near McKinleyville Ave. and Hiller Rd. when they observed a male subject emerge from a residential driveway on Hiller Rd.
The subject who was dressed in dark clothing, wearing a backpack continued walking along Hiller Rd. as deputies tried to initiate contact with him. During this time, the subject reached into his pockets and discarded items in the bushes and onto the ground.
Deputies detained the subject, who was identified as Aaron Thomas Bjorkstrand, 42 years-old, a convicted felon, of McKinleyville.
Bjorkstrand was in possession of a stun gun flashlight and an empty gun holster. The discarded property collected by deputies included:
- A loaded Glock 22.40 caliber semi-automatic handgun
- An unloaded, non-serialized handgun determined to be a “ghost gun”.
- A loaded gun magazine
- Apple iPhone
Bjorkstrand was arrested and transported to the Humboldt County Correctional Facility (HCCF) and booked on the following charges:
- P.C. 29800(a)(1) Felon in possession of a firearm
- P.C. 30305(a)(1) Felon in possession of ammunition
- P.C. 24610 (a) Possession of an undetectable firearm
- P.C. 22610(a) Felon in possession of a stun gun
- P.C. 148(a)(1) Obstruct/Resist peace officer
CalFresh Recipients are Starting to Receive Their November Benefits, County Says, Though the Situation is Still a Bit Up in the Air
LoCO Staff / Yesterday @ 10:22 a.m. / News
Press release from the Humboldt County Department of Health and Human Services:
After delays and many unknowns during the federal government shutdown, CalFresh recipients started receiving their November benefits on Thursday, Nov. 6. This move followed an order from a federal judge earlier in the day who directed the U.S. Department of Agriculture to find enough money to restore full funding for SNAP benefits by Friday, Nov. 7.
While this situation continues to be fluid, Humboldt County Department of Health & Human Services Director Connie Beck said Friday morning, with the changing information and unknowns, finding out benefits started being issued last night was a “wonderful surprise” and a relief for the more than 30,000 county residents who receive CalFresh.
“In this trying time, staff and our community have really stepped up,” she said. “Not only is DHHS is the midst of hosting our own county employee food drive, but numerous local restaurants, businesses and other community residents are doing the same. I am proud to be a part of this community and very proud of this department and our staff.”
According to a news release from California Gov. Gavin Newsom issued Thursday evening, “Following two lawsuits filed by California and other states and a coalition of others, California families are beginning to see their full SNAP benefits restored on their EBT cards. Earlier today, a court ordered the Trump administration to immediately issue 100% of funding for 5.5 million California SNAP recipients. Following the regular process for providing CalFresh benefits, benefits are now beginning to be available on recipients’ cards so that families can again access the food they need.”
While this is subject to change, it means that households that would normally receive their full benefits between Nov. 1 and 7, are on track to have their full benefits available by Friday, and households that would normally receive their full benefits between Nov. 8 and 10, are on track to have their full benefits available as normal, an email from the California Welfare Directors Association stated. Households determined to be newly eligible for November are also on track to receive full benefits.
In Humboldt County, approximately 22% of county residents receive CalFresh benefits which equates to between $5.8 and $6 million a month. These benefits not only supplement the food budgets of elderly community residents, families with children and other individuals, there are many businesses in the county that accept EBT cards and rely on this income as well.
Families that receive benefits through the WIC (Women, Infants & Children) program, can expect to continue receiving them through November, despite the shutdown.
For more information about your CalFresh benefits, visit BenefitsCal.com or call DHHS’s Social Services Call Center at 1-877-410-8809.
