(PHOTOS) State Route 199 Remains Closed Following Overnight Rockslide

LoCO Staff / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 1:54 p.m. / News , Transportation

Photos via Caltrans.

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PREVIOUSLY

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State Route 199 remains fully closed along a five-mile stretch near Hiouchi, up in Del Norte County, following a rockslide onto the roadway late last night, according to the California Department of Transportation. 

The Caltrans District 1 Facebook page says the agency is turning travelers around on either side of post-miles 8.3 and 13 miles from Hwy. 101. 

“Responding crews, including maintenance and geotechnical personnel, recognize the importance of this route and the long detours around the slide, and are working hard to resume safe access as soon as possible,” the agency says. “We’ll keep you in the loop here when updates are available.”

Here are more photos of the slide and the cleanup effort:


MORE →


SURVEY: Tell the City of Arcata What Kind of Services You Want at Valley West’s New Community Center

Isabella Vanderheiden / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 12:48 p.m. / Community Services

Do you live in Arcata? Better yet, do you live in Arcata’s Valley West neighborhood? Do you enjoy community classes? Group exercise sessions? Gardening with your neighbors? How about increased access to social and health care services? 

If you answered “yes” to any of those questions, take a few minutes to complete this survey and let the City of Arcata know what types of programming and services you’d like to see at the new community center slated for Valley West. 

The survey is a part of the city’s ongoing effort to revamp Valley West, Arcata’s oft-overlooked neighborhood. In recent years, the city has allocated funds for numerous beautification and community improvement projects for Valley West, including REBOUND’s basketball court murals, new fruit trees at Valley West Park and infrastructure upgrades at Carlson Park. A new community center is next on the wish list.

Last year, the City of Arcata started leasing space for a community center at Valley West’s Woodsman Hall but Comunidad Unidad del Norte de Arcata/Community United of North Arcata (CUNA), a bilingual grassroots project aimed at improving Valley West, took over the lease for its resilience hub and family resource center.

Asked whether the City of Arcata is looking to lease an existing space or build a brand-new facility for the community center, Jennifer Dart, the city’s deputy director of community development, said staff is “open, at this point, to all options.”

“We’re in the early planning stages so we don’t have any mock-ups or locations planned out yet,” Dart told the Outpost. “Based on some previous engagement that was done by Cal Poly [Humboldt] students in 2021, there was a desire for space for recreational activities for youth and adults as well as classroom spaces for adult education. There was also a need expressed for a food pantry and mobile medical/dental care. The current survey will help provide additional clarity on what needs a Valley West Community Center could fulfill.”

The city is planning an in-person visioning session early next year to discuss the survey results with the Valley West community and go over next steps.

“We’re really looking forward to working with the Valley West community to develop a center that meets their needs,” Dart added.

Click here to take the survey. More information about Valley West improvement projects can be found at this link.

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Providence Plans to Drastically Reduce the Availability of Open Heart Surgery in Humboldt County Next Year, According to Employees at St. Joseph Hospital

Ryan Burns / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 7:30 a.m. / Health Care

A Providence sign affixed to St. Joseph Hospital in Eureka. | File photo.

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UPDATE:

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Early next year, Providence Health & Services will significantly reduce the availability of open heart surgery in Humboldt County by eliminating the only cardiothoracic surgeon position at St. Joseph Hospital, according to three employees who were present when the decision was announced internally last week.

In interviews with the Outpost, the employees say Providence made its decision for financial reasons, and they warn that the reduction in services will inevitably delay critical care to patients who suffer cardiac emergencies. Without a local open heart surgeon, county residents will also have to travel out of the area for non-emergency procedures such as valve replacements and coronary bypass surgeries.

A hospital spokesperson told the Outpost that Providence is not eliminating its heart program, though he declined to respond to allegations that the availability of cardiac surgery services will soon be reduced significantly.

In a staff meeting last Thursday morning with more than 100 employees present, management announced that Dr. Joseph Arcidi, the county’s only open heart surgeon, plans to resign by the beginning of February and administrators don’t intend to replace him.

Once he’s gone, they were told, Providence will have an out-of-county heart surgeon (probably from Santa Rosa) come to Eureka for six days per month to serve as the designated surgeon-on-standby during non-emergency heart procedures such as stent placements, angiograms and radial artery catheterizations. For the other 24 days per month, give or take, those procedures won’t be available locally, they said.

If anyone in Humboldt County suffers a serious cardiac emergency while the visiting surgeon happens to be in town, then local open heart surgery will likely be available. But if the emergency occurs outside of that six-day window, it won’t, the employees told the Outpost

“That could be detrimental to people who need cardiac surgery instantaneously,” said hospital employee Jessica Smith. [NOTE: That’s not her real name. She requested anonymity due to fear of professional repercussions.]

Asked if it’s fair to assume that local residents will die as a result of this decision, Smith didn’t hesitate. “Absolutely,” she said. “I 100% believe that.”

Austin Allison, a former Eureka City Councilmember and surgical technologist at St. Joseph Hospital, agreed to go on the record. He said that while heart attacks now are typically treated without having to open up the heart, there are other kinds of cardiac traumas that can occur without warning.

“There are accidents that happen all the time,” he said. “There’s shootings, stabbings … car accidents. Now, there will be no one [locally] available to help them” — except on those days when the out-of-town surgeon happens to be here.

Smith recalled one such incident when a patient was brought in to St. Joseph Hospital’s emergency room following heart trauma that required emergency open heart surgery. Time is of the utmost importance in such cases.

“The patient’s bleeding inside, and the pericardium is like a balloon — it can only hold so much,” Smith said. “The pressure builds up so much in the sac that [holds] the heart that the patient [eventually] dies because the heart can’t move.”

In this case, the patient was quickly moved into surgery and survived, Smith said. But if a similar incident happens after Dr. Arcidi leaves — and if it occurs outside of the six-day window when a visiting surgeon is here — then the patient will almost certainly need to be air-lifted to Santa Rosa or St. Helena, which takes at least two hours on a good day, according to Smith and Allison.

“And it’s weather-dependent,” Allison said. “You know how often our airport is grounded.”

Asked whether such a delay could prove fatal, Smith said, “It’s just a matter of time.”

Emergencies can also arise during more common heart procedures. St. Joseph Hospital’s Heart Institute is a designated STEMI receiving center, meaning it is equipped to handle ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, the kind of serious heart attack often referred to as “the big one.”

Having a heart surgeon on standby is a precondition for being a designated STEMI receiving center, in part so that the surgeon — Dr. Arcidi, in the case of St. Joseph Hospital — is available should anything go wrong during procedures regularly performed in the cardiac catheterization lab (or “cath lab”).

“The cath lab is like the plumbing department,” Allison explained. Procedures commonly performed there include coronary angioplasties (in which a balloon is used to widen blocked or narrowed coronary arteries) and percutaneous coronary interventions, or PCI (in which a stent is inserted in a coronary artery to keep it open and prevent it from closing again).

Such procedures typically involve inserting a long, thin catheter tube, or “wire,” into a blood vessel in the patient’s wrist.

“But, say if the wire leaves that vessel and makes a hole, it’s possible to have a bad outcome and [the patient] may have to have open heart surgery,” Allison said.

“If you have a puncture, you have to have someone who can fix it,” confirmed another St. Joseph Hospital employee, who we’ll call Melissa Jones [also a pseudonym].

Such incidents are very rare, but Allison said it’s still important to have the heart team on standby. Jones explained that this team includes not just the surgeon but also an anesthesiologist, cardiovascular technologists and a perfusionist to operate the heart-lung machine.

“If your dad was getting an emergency surgery, you’d want him to have this [backup team] available and not have to go to Santa Rosa,” Allison said.

Smith recalls at least two patients who came in for pacemaker procedures, which are considered “elective” in that they’re meant to prevent cardiac emergencies rather than treat them. These patients fell victim to a rare accident in which the wire inserted into the heart perforated the left ventricle, “meaning the heart is actively pumping, and every time it pumps, blood is leaking out into the pericardium,” Smith said. “That [requires] surgery because blood is pooling around the heart.”

As with the heart trauma mentioned above, acting quickly in such cases is critically important.

“There’s no time to transfer them [to an out-of-county hospital] before they die,” Smith said.

Providence Denies Changes

The Outpost first received a tip last week saying that St. Joseph’s heart program would soon be eliminated altogether. We emailed Christian Hill, senior communications manager for Providence Northern California, and he responded, “I can confirm that we are NOT closing our heart program at St. Joseph Hospital.”

He also asked us to reveal our sources.

Last Thursday, having interviewed the above-quoted employees, we followed up with Hill to relay the specifics, including Dr. Arcidi’s pending resignation; the subsequent reduction in cardiac surgery services; the plan to bring a visiting surgeon to Humboldt County for six days per month; and the elimination of “elective” heart surgeries outside of those limited business hours.

Hill’s reply, sent five hours later, was brief: “Thanks for the follow up,” he wrote. “The email from Thursday is our response.”

Smith anticipated such a denial when we interviewed her earlier in the week.

“They’ll come back and say, ‘We’re not taking it away,’ you know. But they’re gonna offer it six days a month. That’s taking away,” she said.  “We [currently] have cardiac coverage 24/7. We have cardiac coverage for open heart surgery 24/7, 365. It’s always available. We always have a cardiac surgeon ready to go.”

After Dr. Arcidi leaves, that won’t be the case, she said.

When we spoke with Jones on Monday, she said, “The fact that they’re denying it seems crazy to me because they announced it in a meeting with more than 100 people.”

The Outpost called St. Joseph’s Heart Institute in hopes of speaking with Dr. Arcidi himself, but we were told that he is out of town through the end of the month.

Financial motives

Providence Health & Services, a Catholic health care system headquartered in Renton, Wash., is organized as a not-for-profit, but critics say it operates like a greedy corporation. It has reported hundreds of millions of dollars in operating losses each year since the COVID pandemic, but it also earns hundreds of millions through venture capital and financial market investments. The industry website Fierce Heathcare recently reported that Providence racked up $7.8 billion in unrestricted cash and investments through the first nine months of 2024.

Allison said Providence cares more about profits than patients, as demonstrated by its decision to slash open heart surgery services in Humboldt County.

“The [administration] is basically saying, ‘We don’t want to keep this program because it’s too expensive to run, just like what happened to rehab,” he said, referring to the recent closure of the acute inpatient rehabilitation unit on the General Hospital campus.

“It seems like with this hospital, if a program isn’t in the black they don’t want to subsidize it, even if it helps the community,” he continued. “You’re going to have to be flown out of the area to get the care you need. It’s just a scary thing for the community.”

He also lamented the impact this may have on the larger community.

“It hurts Humboldt County because when we lose health services, it makes future industry growth here poor,” he said. “People aren’t going to want to move to the area if our health care sucks. … The greed of the corporation is really affecting the rest of the county, because there really is nothing else available.”

He paused to acknowledge that some services provided by Providence are actually expanding. For example, he said, there’s now a pulmonologist on staff for the first time in years. 

“But we have to be aware of how Providence is a monopoly for services and how that affects this county,” Allison said. “It just seems so greedy, everything they’re doing. Losing the cardiac program is just one more thing.”

Both Smith and Allison said that starting next February, more local patients and their families will have to endure the inconvenience and expense of traveling out of town and staying for days during the difficult recovery period for open heart surgery.

“Open heart surgery recovery takes at least a week,” Smith said. 

Many patients who are forced to leave Humboldt County for surgery won’t have their families nearby for support — or their families will have to travel and stay in hotels, eat out and rack up expenses.

“[Currently] you have your family, your resources here to help take care of you,” Allison said. “Open heart surgery is a very big deal, and recovery can be difficult. …. To be out of Humboldt where your family is is, like, a really big undertaking.”

But all three employees agreed that the most serious repercussion of this decision will be the increased risk faced by people here in Humboldt County who suddenly experience a cardiac emergency and are forced to wait hours to receive the necessary care.

To only have six days a month for the cardiac program? It’s ridiculous,” Smith said. “I just hate this for the community.”



OBITUARY: Brandon Lee Heryford, 1993-2024

LoCO Staff / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits

On November 13, 2024, at the young age of 31, Brandon Lee Heryford passed away from complications of diabetes. He was born June 23, 1993 in Yuba City. After graduating from Sutter High School he began working for the family business as an electrician and equipment operator.

It was apparent at a very young age that he was extremely gifted in mechanics and engineering and could fix or build just about anything. His hands were never clean again after the age of about nine years old, the grease and dirt a constant visual of his appreciation for how things worked, and his tireless dedication to offering his skills often and freely to help anyone in need, regardless of their situation. Brandon’s kindness to others was widely known and appreciated by many.

Brandon enjoyed all manner of outdoor activities including hunting, fishing, and ATV’s, but his passion was motorcycles. He started working on them at 13 years old and nicknamed his first bike he built Ilean because he didn’t put a kickstand on it. He rode dirt bikes all over the Sutter Buttes growing up, and enjoyed riding in Humboldt after relocating to this area with family in 2012.

Brandon is survived by his seven-year-old son Leo Heryford, his parents John and Michele Heryford of Carlotta, brother and sister-in-law Travis and Tammy Heryford of Eureka, brother Cody Heryford of Las Vegas, grandfather Calvin Heryford of Central Point, Oregon, grandparents Howard Shepherd and Lorraine Murray of Auke Bay, Alaska, grandfather Heinz Lengfelder of Alturas, aunt and uncle Janice and Gene Elmore of Eagle Point, Oregon, and aunt and uncle Laura and Norman Nasise of Red Bluff.

A graveside service will be held May 25, 2025 at the Cedarville Cemetery in Cedarville, California. Details will follow at a later date.

Brandon was a genuine, loyal, kind soul and will be forever missed.

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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Brandon Heryford’s loved onesThe Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.



OBITUARY: Marlena (Mina) Rochelle Neely, 1989-2024

LoCO Staff / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits

‘“I’ve cried buckets of tears through the years for my beautiful browned eyed girl” — Van Morrison. As a child this was her song.

Marlena (Mina) Rochelle Neely was born on March 17, 1989, in Arcata, California, and went on to the next level, November 15, 2024, in Denver, Colorado.

Marlena had a fond love for Elvis Presley, listening and singing to his music played on a boombox she carried around the house. After watching her first Elvis movie she was hooked and had her own collection of movies on VHS tapes.

Marlena attended mass at Christ the King Catholic Church and was one of the first girls allowed to be an Alter Server. Marlena loved to read, an interest she shared with her grandmother, Wanda Hudson. They often spent time together talking about what they were reading and what they had recently read. She also knew how to put her thoughts and feelings into words and created books of poetry that others purchased online.

Marlena loved animals, especially cats and horses. She once rescued a cat from two older boys who were abusing the cat and named him “Philly Cheesesteak.” She was not afraid of anything or anyone, even at an early age. She also had a horse named “Pepper.” She kept her horse at her Grandparents home, and this afforded her many opportunities to spend time with them, strengthening their bond.

As a young lady, Marlena gave birth to her first son, Dominic Phines. Dominic was raised by his grandparents and became a little brother to her younger siblings. She later married Alejandro Barajas and had two sons, Alejandro and Rickie Barajas.

Marlena is survived by her mother Andrea Hudson Neely; sons Dominic Phines, Alejandro and Rickie Barajas; grandparents Charles and Wanda Hudson; siblings Bryce (Mariana) Neely, Michele Fisher, and Marisa Neely (Alex Gasper); uncles Greg Hudson and Danny Neely; aunts Diana Gier, Teresa (Jon) Daigneault, Carolyn (Mike) Smith, Darlene Neely and Michele (Ed) Gnadig; nieces Jaylee Smith, Khalia Kennedy, Brandi Fisher, Josie and Delani Neely, Alina and Viviana Gasper and nephew Marshall Reed. Marlena is also survived by many cousins. Marlena was preceded in death by her father Larry Neely, grandparents Pat and Chuck Neely, her special cousin Chuckie Hudson, cousins Crystal and Allen Neely and her aunt Patty Vizena.

A celebration of life service will be held on Sunday, June 15, beginning with family attending mass at Christ the King Catholic Church in McKinleyville at 9 a.m., followed by a reception at the home of her mother. Marlena’s cremains will remain with her mother in McKinleyville.

“Children are a gift and blessing from God, but they are not ours to keep. We mourn for Marlena who has been called back by God.”

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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Marlena Neely’s loved onesThe Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.



OBITUARY: James B. Kaufman, 1959-2024

LoCO Staff / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits

James B. Kaufman
Also known as “Jim” or “Jimmy”
Feb. 4, 1959-Oct. 28, 2024

James was a wonderful person, full of life and laughter, and always had a smile or a joke to tell. James loved his family, always on time to wish a happy birthday or a happy holiday before anyone else. James was always the first to call, and he never forgot anyone’s birthday.

James was proud to be a lifelong resident of Humboldt County, where he grew up with a large and loving family. James was preceded in death by his brothers, Leroy, Rodney and David; one sister, Gwen Grammer; and his father, Bill Kaufman, and mother, Maxine Hadley. James was survived by one brother, Donald Kaufman, his daughter Dez, his grandchild Gracie and many nieces and nephews.

James is also survived by his brother-in-law, Elmer Grammer, who helped James in many ways, including helping James get into AA where James fought his demons and was successfully clean and sober for the last 12 years. The last twelve years James has been great in getting his life focused, and James met the love of his life, Lisa Reed and her children Ross and Jenna.

James was a Green Bay Packers fan, proud to be a Cheesehead and loved watching games. James’ AA family was there for him always, and he will be missed by many. James’ illness came on fast and nobody expected him to pass. Very unexpected.

James was cared for after his passing by Sacred Tidings in Novato.

R.I.P little brother, you’ve earned your wings. Fly free and we’ll see you on the other side.

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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of James Kaufman’s loved onesThe Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.



OBITUARY: Todd Keenan Burhus, 1974-2024

LoCO Staff / Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits

With heavy hearts, we announce the passing of Todd Keenan Burhus, known to many as “Thunder McCovey.” He was a cherished son, father, brother, friend, and a proud member of the Yurok Tribe.

Born in Crescent City on April 1, 1974, to Paula Valenzuela and Willard Carlson, Thunder was kind, bold, brave, and a jokester who loved making people laugh.

Those he loved, he loved deeply.

Living along the Klamath River, Thunder embraced his heritage and the beauty of the land that shaped him. He loved being in nature and the freedom of the outdoors, often found fishing or hiking trails like Resighini High Prairie Creek. Thunder had two sides: one that lived life on the edge and another that cherished time with loved ones, especially his closest friends, whom he affectionately called his “Down River Bros.” He was always willing to help anyone who asked.

Thunder personified the essence of an outlaw-fiercely independent, daring, and unapologetically true to himself. His legacy will forever echo in the hearts of those who knew him.

He was preceded in death by his mother, Paula Valenzuela, and his grandmother, Marie Lawson McCovey, grandfather Willard Carlson Sr grandmother Margret Frye, who were all central figures in his life. He is survived by his father, Willard Carlson, and his children Thunder Burhus, Shannon Burhus, Carmen Pratt. His siblings are Pergish Carlson, Will Bear Carlson, Holly Carlson, Mike Carlson, and family and friends who will cherish his untamed spirit.

A celebration of Thunder’s life will be held on Friday.

  1. Cawtip Silvia
  2. Mike Gabe
  3. Hector Trip
  4. Big Charlie
  5. Little Charlie
  6. Levi Trip
  7. Bull Calf Donahue
  8. Trevor Lado
  9. William Valenzuela
  10. Michael Paul
  11. Arrow Valenzuela
  12. Rick Dowd Jr
  13. Gary Dowd
  14. Ben Ray
  15. Kahno Gordon
  16. Julian Markusan
  17. Dean Wheeler
  18. Rob Wheeler
  19. Jason Hodge
  20. Little Bill Mccovey
  21. Uncle Billy
  22. Jay Bates
  23. Larry Nova
  24. Arnie Nova
  25. Vincent Traci
  26. Shannon Jones

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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Bill Jackson’s loved onesThe Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.