Inclusionary Zoning Passes and Annie and Mary Trail is Officially a Go from Yesterday’s City Council Meeting
Dezmond Remington / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 4:10 p.m. / Arcata
A map of the Annie-Mary Trail.
PREVIOUSLY
Arcata’s city council voted last night to approve new inclusionary housing requirements and an agreement with the Great Redwood Trail Agency to start the groundwork on the Annie and Mary Trail.
The city council voted to place the inclusionary zoning measures on yesterday’s consent calendar at the last city council meeting after amending it to kick in when a development is 60 units or bigger, instead of the original 30.
Its passage motivated a little resistance. During public comment, Arcata resident Rebecca Smith said that she thought 60 units was far too high of a hurdle to clear and wouldn’t lead to many apartments for lower-income people. Both council members and other residents had the same concern at the last council meeting, but Arcata’s community development director David Loya said that there were a few constructed last year in the Valley West neighborhood.
Everything on the consent calendar, including the inclusionary zoning measure, passed 4-0.
The council also voted to approve a licensing agreement with the Great Redwood Trail Agency, which will allow the long-anticipated Annie and Mary Trail to begin construction this year. When finished in 2027 (or so), it’ll extend all the way from Arcata to the Water District Park on West End.
The GRTA owns the old railways on which the trail will be built, so a licensing agreement is a necessary step for the trail to be built. Under the terms of the agreement, the city will be able to build the trail and will maintain it for 25 years. If somehow a rail company decides to start using trains in Arcata again, the trail will be removed.
“All of us here have been on the council for a while,” councilmember Sarah Schaefer said. “We see these projects that are big projects that we’ve been talking about the whole time we’ve been on council, so it’s really nice to see these really start to move forward with a really exciting and soon timeline. I’m really excited to move forward on this.”
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Bridge South of Rio Dell Named in Honor of Murdered Caltrans Employee
LoCO Staff / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 2:39 p.m. / News
Photo: Office of Mike McGuire.
PREVIOUSLY:
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Press release from the office of Sen. Mike McGuire:
Senate President pro Tempore Mike McGuire led an afternoon ceremony yesterday to officially dedicate the Annette Brooks Memorial Bridge on Highway 101 in memory of fallen Caltrans worker Annette Kaleialoha Brooks.
Brooks served for 36 years at Caltrans, rising through the ranks from a toll booth collector in the Bay Area to Steel Structural Painter Supervisor in Humboldt County. She was beloved by her family, co-workers, and community of friends in Humboldt, and was known for her warm smile, big laugh, and many artistic talents.
After Brooks’ tragic death on April 24, 2017, Caltrans, along with the County of Humboldt and the City of Rio Dell, partnered with Sen. McGuire on a state resolution to name a bridge in honor of Brooks. The newly designated Annette Brooks Memorial Bridge is located in southern Humboldt County over beautiful Jordan Creek, just a few miles south of Rio Dell.
“On the almost the 8th anniversary of her passing, we’re here to make good on a promise and raise the signs for the Annette Brooks Memorial Bridge,” said Pro Tem McGuire. “Ms. Brooks dedicated her career to the people of California and went above and beyond every day in her job. We were honored by the presence of Annette’s family, friends, and co-workers at this week’s ceremony. It was a beautiful tribute to her life in public service.”
“Our Caltrans family was honored to gather in memory of Annette Brooks yesterday. She was an incredibly dedicated and successful supervisor, and even more, a friend who is sorely missed by so many. It was our privilege to join Senator McGuire in designating the Annette Brooks Memorial Bridge, and cement Annette’s memory in the history of Humboldt County,” said Caltrans District 1 Director Matt Brady.
The dedication ceremony was attended by Brooks’ five siblings, Brian, Curtis, Douglas, Evalani, and Ferlin, and two nephews, Jordon and Jeran.
Following Brooks’ death at the Caltrans substation in Rio Dell, along with another horrific workplace violence event in 2021 at a light rail station in San Jose, the state Legislature passed SB 553 in 2023. Now state law, the legislation require employers to establish and maintain a Workplace Violence Prevention Plan that includes incident logs, trainings, and period plan reviews, among other support and protections from those enduring unlawful violence in the workplace.
The Annette Brooks Memorial Bridge designated Bridge Number 04-0208 over Jordan Creek at post mile 46.19 on State Highway 101.
REPORT: Horse Racing at the Humboldt County Fair is Still Just Barely a Possibility, Following Today’s Meeting of the Racing Board
Hank Sims / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 1:48 p.m. / News
Horse racing at the Humboldt County Fair. Photo: Redwood Coast, via Flickr. Creative Commons license.
It looks like the dream of keeping horse racing alive at the Humboldt County Fair is just barely hanging on by a thread, following today’s meeting of the California Horse Racing Board.
According to an excellent report on the Daily Racing Form’s website, the board voted 3-2 to deny the fair’s request for seven days on the racing schedule. But the board is currently short of members, and four votes are required to take definitive action on such a request.
One of the “yes” votes on the board — Oscar Gonzalez — encouraged the fair to try again once an empty commissioner’s seat is filled, the DRF reports.
Horse racing has long been the big cash cow for the Humboldt County Fair, which earns money not only from fairgoers but from off-track betting revenue. Continued racing dates for the fair are strongly opposed by Southern California interests, which would — openly, according to the DRF report — prefer to keep that money for itself.
In a letter to board members, James Morgan, the Humboldt County Fair’s general counsel, wrote:
Apparently, the south feels that already receiving 49 weeks a year of commissions generated from wagers placed in the north is somehow not enough. North-generated commissions have never gone to the south in the past during this late August time period and there is no justification in precluding HCPA from having a third week of racing just so the south can receive a windfall from money wagered in the north.
State senator Mike McGuire and Congressman Jared Huffman each wrote letters to the racing board, urging them to approve Humboldt’s dates.
Again: Read more at the Daily Racing Form.
Rep. Jared Huffman Responds to ‘Unprecedented’ Commercial Salmon Fishery Closure
Isabella Vanderheiden / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 1 p.m. / Environment , Fish
Federal fishery managers unanimously voted this week to cancel commercial salmon fishing in California.| Photo: Michael Humling - U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
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North Coast Rep. Jared Huffman today issued a statement in response to the Pacific Fishery Management Council’s recent decision to shut down California’s commercial salmon fishing season for the third year in a row, in an effort to help Chinook salmon populations rebound from deteriorating ecological conditions. The “unprecedented” move could have “devastating impacts” on the coastal communities and fishermen who depend on the salmon season to stay afloat, Huffman said.
Read the full statement below.
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Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Representative Jared Huffman (CA-02) released the following statement regarding the Pacific Fishery Management Council’s vote to cancel salmon fishing season in California:
“Coastal towns, river communities, and thousands of salmon fishery employees depend on the salmon season to generate income and stay afloat – and now, for the third year in a row, they’ve been dealt another devastating impact with an unprecedented closure of the 2025 salmon season. The last two years of closures have devastated California’s coastal economies – and facing a third consecutive closure marks an unprecedented low point. Our slipping environmental conditions are to blame for this economic disaster: we are seeing dangerously low ocean abundance forecasts for the Sacramento River Fall-Run Chinook Salmon, and Trump’s extremist agenda is only going to worsen this already developing crisis,” said Rep. Huffman.
“Trump has vowed to slash current environmental protections even further – which could result in more irresponsible water management during droughts and ultimately, additional salmon season closures in the future. It’s completely unacceptable – and while I’m relieved that I’ve been able to pass reforms in Congress for federal disaster relief, the amount of disaster money secured is not nearly enough to sustain the needs of fishermen, tribes, businesses, and families who depend on healthy salmon fisheries. Now entering this third canceled season, we will have to restart this process for federal funding once again and keep pushing the state to speed up its own process for quantifying impacts,” Rep. Huffman continued.
“While I will continue fighting to bring these state and federal efforts home, this scramble for disaster relief is an unsustainable and insufficient solution to the downward spiral that California salmon fisheries are facing, and have been facing for years now. Instead, we need to implement mechanisms to prevent fishery disasters in the first place. And to do that, we need to confront the irresponsible policies that are killing salmon – including failing to protect cold water supplies, starving rivers and tributaries of flows salmon need to survive, and over-pumping in the Delta during sensitive times for migrating salmon. Trump’s environmental policies are only going to worsen these already compromised conditions, and I will keep doing everything I can in Congress to prevent his agenda from impacting our coastal communities here in California,” Huffman concluded.
Trump Policy Targeting Immigrants Shuts California Students Out of Federal Programs
Adam Echelman / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 8:30 a.m. / Sacramento
Students walking out of their classes through the hallways at Coalinga College on Oct. 9, 2023. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local
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This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
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President Donald Trump has taken aim at students and professors at California’s elite institutions, such as UC Berkeley and UCLA, but community colleges, which enroll the majority of the state’s students, have largely avoided the administration’s ire.
Until recently. The U.S. Department of Education announced on March 27 that it was stopping California universities and colleges from using federal funding to “provide services to illegal immigrants.” The education department is specifically referring to federal TRIO programs, which provide various forms of financial aid and counseling to low-income, first-generation students.
California schools don’t track how many of their students lack legal status. Although exact figures are hard to capture, some estimates, such as the number of applications for in-state aid, suggest that there are thousands of students without legal status, most of whom are attending California’s community colleges.
More than 100,000 students in California are enrolled in a TRIO program, said Dalia Hernandez, the president of a professional association that works closely with these programs. Informally, colleges know that some students in these programs lack legal status. Now campus TRIO officials are grappling with the president’s order and wondering if they are going to have to start documenting citizenship.
Although non-citizens aren’t eligible for federal financial aid, in 2022 the education department granted California special permission to enroll them in TRIO programs’ academic services through September 2026.
Now the administration is revoking that permission.
In a Zoom webinar a few days after the education department’s announcement, Hernandez’s organization, the Western Association of Educational Opportunity Personnel, told college leaders that they could keep serving students in their programs, regardless of immigration status. However, moving forward, schools would need to reject any suspected non-citizen, she said. The federal education department has yet to provide any additional guidance about how to interpret the TRIO policy change.
“I’ve been in 1,000 meetings talking about every executive order that comes out, and every meeting is like, ‘Well, we don’t know what’s going to happen and it’s probably going to get blocked by a federal judge, so just hold on,’” said Brian Boomer, the director of grants at the West Hills Community College District in California’s Central Valley. “This was a little different because they actually gave a directive.”
Outside of California, it’s easy to see why some might argue these federal dollars should only serve U.S. citizens, Boomer said. But in Fresno and Kings counties, where his community college district is located, he said many immigrants are embedded in the community, work in nearby farms, and send their children to the region’s schools and colleges. “That’s the population you serve,” he said. “Our area feeds the country.”
Coalinga College is one of the two schools in his district. More than 70% of its students identify as Latino, and many are current or former farmworkers or children of farmworkers. The college’s largest TRIO program, called Student Support Services, has just under 200 low-income, first generation students enrolled, said Lissette Padilla, who oversees it.
Some of those students likely don’t have legal status, she said, but it’s not clear how many.
A ‘heartbreaking’ change for one student
As a low-income student with a learning disability and the first in his family to attend college, “J” knew he needed help navigating Oxnard College, a community college in Ventura County. He applied to one of the TRIO programs in 2021 but he said he was rejected because program administrators suspected he wasn’t a U.S. citizen. CalMatters has agreed to withhold his name because he fears drawing attention to his legal status.
“I thought this was going to be for all first-generation students,” he said. “I felt like I was abandoned.”
Two years later, after the state got special permission from the federal government, the director of the program reached out to J again, this time to encourage him to reapply. As part of one of the TRIO programs, J got one-on-one guidance with campus counselors who helped ensure that he was on track to meet his academic goals and transfer to a four-year university. The TRIO staff also took him on trips to visit various colleges, including Cal State Northridge, Chico State, and Cal State Long Beach.
Last summer, he enrolled at Cal State Channel Islands, ready to pursue a bachelor’s degree. Many Cal State and University of California campuses offer TRIO programs to their students, but Channel Islands isn’t one of them. “It’s very disappointing,” he said because he was hoping to stay enrolled in one of the TRIO programs.
Even if the university began offering TRIO programs, he won’t qualify if colleges enforce the Trump administration’s policy change. J said it’s “heartbreaking” that students without legal status will no longer have that opportunity to enroll.
In the first few days after the Trump administration’s announcement, schools received little guidance about how to respond and looked to Hernandez, the regional association president, for guidance. She said her interpretation is that TRIO programs are only required to evaluate a student’s eligibility when they first enroll. As a result, she said schools do not need to kick out any students who are currently enrolled, but they shouldn’t register any new students who may lack legal status.
She also recommended that schools revise their intake forms so that students can only identify as male or female. “We’re protecting the programs and the funding that we have,” said Hernandez, referring to Trump’s executive order on gender identity, which prohibits the U.S. government from recognizing gender expansive terms such as non-binary.
Padilla said she’s concerned that Coalinga College may, at some point, need to pull counseling services away from students without legal status who are in the program. She said the contingency plan is to move those students into similar programs that are funded by the state and which don’t ask for proof of citizenship.
Lizette Navarette, the president of Woodland Community College near Sacramento, said she was wary of the initial decision to allow students without legal status to receive services through a federal program. “There was some concern about how safe the student data would be because it’s a federal grant,” she said. For over a year now, her college has been directing those students to state programs, which she said often have more capacity and which don’t share data with the federal government.
Will TRIO get cut?
In 2021, the national association for TRIO administrators, the Cal State University system, the UC system, the California Department of Education and more than 80 other organizations signed a letter addressed to the U.S. Department of Education, calling on it to allow students without legal status to enroll in TRIO programs.
But over the years, support has waned.
The federal government allowed California to expand access to TRIO programs as part of a pilot, which was slated to end next year. In 2023 and 2024, when the U.S. Department of Education discussed expanding access in other states and in a more permanent way, California’s institutions once again voiced their support. But the national association was silent, said Antoinette Flores, the director of a higher education research team at the think tank New America.
She said the association, known as the Council for Opportunity in Education, fears that allowing students without legal status to participate could elicit more scrutiny from the Trump administration and put the entire program at risk. The association didn’t respond to CalMatters’ request for comment.
“We have had, over the years, very strong bipartisan support for federal TRIO programs,” said Hernandez, who also serves as the regional representative of the national association. But she acknowledged that nothing is certain. “There is rhetoric from the current administration about dismantling these federal programs.”
She said her regional association still wants to include all low-income, first-generation students in TRIO programs, including students without legal status, but other colleges and universities outside the state may have a different perspective. “California is one of the very few states in the country that has resources and support earmarked for undocumented students and youth. Others may not have as much.”
OBITUARY: Judy Maxine Gower, 1943-2025
LoCO Staff / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
In Loving Memory
Judy Maxine Gower
June 3rd, 1943 - April 8th, 2025
Judy Maxine Gower, 81, of Willow Creek, California, passed away peacefully in her home surrounded by her loved ones on April 8th, 2025, after a brief battle with cancer.
Judy was born in Columbus, Georgia, on June 3rd, 1943, to Mary Lenore and Marion Francis Parrott. She grew up alongside her brothers Marion “Buddy” Parrott II, Ronald “Ronnie” Parrott, and Donald “Donnie” Parrott.
In 1964, on her 21st birthday, Judy made the life-changing decision to move to Willow Creek, California, with her first husband, Gerald Chase, and their two young daughters, Tammy and Terry. Judy met Gerald when he was serving in the military and stationed in the south. After the passing of her first husband, Gerald, she later married her loving and devoted partner, Doyle Gower, on April 9th, 1968. The following year, they welcomed their daughter, Vicki, on April 19th, 1969.
Judy was well known in the community as the longtime manager of Coast Central Credit Union, where she helped countless people over the years, not just with banking, but with compassion, wisdom, and a generous heart. You’d be hard-pressed to find someone in Willow Creek who doesn’t have a story about a time Judy helped them. She was a friend to everyone she knew, including any stranger, and she was always willing to lend a hand wherever it may have been needed.
She was happiest when surrounded by family and close friends, especially her best friends, Sherron Racy and Margie Fleming. Judy and her friends made a lasting impression on the town in the 70s when they created their famous dancing group called the Willow Creek Flappers. This group of ladies were some of her closest friends whom she loved and adored and occasionally cut a rug with. Included were – Toots Rowland, Vonnie Gower, Sherron Racy, Ella Dobrec, JoAnn Bridges, and Sue Hodgson. Having a good time and putting a smile on others’ faces was an attribute of hers that never fell short.
Judy was devoted to her family like no other. From never missing a birthday to being the first to show up on Christmas morning. She was there when we needed to cry or even share our biggest accomplishments. She made the best deviled eggs and chocolate cream pies; not a single person who tried could compare to them, even when she gave the full recipe. She was, in simple terms, one of a kind.
Judy is preceded in death by her parents, Mary Lenore and Marion Parrott; her brother, Marion “Buddy” Parrott II; her daughters, Tammy Chase and Terry Chase; and her first husband, Gerald Chase.
She is survived by her loving husband of 57 years, Doyle Gower; brothers Ronnie Parrott (Barbara); and Donnie Parrott; daughter Vicki Baugh (Gary); grandchildren Gary Baugh (Alli); Mikayla Baugh (Hunter); Larry “Jr” Alameda; Jeremy Alameda (Lucy); Sheena Chase; and Cadilla Thomas. Great-grandchildren Damon, Tyler, and Peyton Bryant; and Jeremy Alameda Jr., as well as numerous cousins, nieces, and nephews.
Though we mourn her passing, we take comfort in the love she gave so freely, and the strong, beautiful family she leaves behind. We find peace and blessing knowing she is in the presence of Jesus, and we will get the opportunity to see her again. She will be deeply missed and forever remembered.
A celebration of Judy’s life will be held at the Salyer Wayside Chapel in Salyer, California, on Saturday, May 31st, starting at 11 a.m.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Judy Gower’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.
OBITUARY: Frederick Ernest Ahboltin, 1950-2025
LoCO Staff / Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
On March 7, 2025 Frederick Ernest Ahboltin departed for the hereafter from his home in Eureka, watched over by his beloved wife Dorie.
Fred was born in Oakland in 1950 to Fred and Monica (Job) Ahboltin. He grew up in at-the-time somewhat rural San Leandro with his older brother Marvin. In his school years he developed a love of books, comics, music and theater, and formed friendships that would last his whole life. He graduated Bishop O’Dowd Catholic High School in 1968, before getting his B.A. in English Literature at Santa Clara University.
In 1977, Fred moved north to Humboldt County to seek a simpler existence away from the city. Over the next 10 years he taught and administrated for a childcare agency, where he met Martha Dumke and her 6-month old son Matthew. Fred and Martha were married in 1980, and in September they were blessed with daughter Laurel.
In 1982 the marriage ended and Fred began devoting his energy to Common Ground daycare, an independent childcare center he opened with close friend and business partner Kent Schaefer. Common Ground became a small community hub and a place for Matthew, Laurel and their peers to grow up in.
In 1984 Fred met the love of his life, Dorie Lopes, who had come to California from Rhode Island. They were married in 1987. Along with Dorie’s son Troy, the couple had two additional sons: Samuel in 1989, and John in 1993.
Fred worked various jobs to support his family, doing seasonal work, working graveyard shifts, and constantly trying his hand at new trades. He lent his powerful voice and diligent guitar playing to the choir at St. Bernard’s church.
In the late 90s he discovered a passion for bicycling, completing Ferndale’s 50-mile Tour of the Unknown Coast in his 50th year. He went on to complete the 100-mile Tour and other various distance rides, often accompanied by his wife and close friends. The new millenium also saw Fred working as a CNA at Pacific Nursing Home, until his retirement at the age of 63. He fixed up a home for him and Dorie to live in and spent the rest of his life joyfully maintaining their little corner of the world.
All through his life Fred found a great deal of fulfillment in caring for others. Whether it was childcare, elder care, cooking, cleaning, singing, gardening, or simply listening; he truly loved to see others happy and well. He was an avid reader, moviegoer and video gamer, and loved to talk about the things he had read, seen, and accomplished. He spent the last days of his life surrounded by friends and family. He will be remembered for his creativity, his earnest silliness, and his strong yet gentle voice.
Fred is survived by his wife Dorie, daughter Laurel Ahboltin and grandchildren Kaeli Mae Jewell, Charlie Jewell, Elijah Squier, Olivia Squier, Penelope Squier, stepsons Matt Huber and Troy Harmon, and sons Sam and John.
“Our gift is to serve; We make beauty out of nothing.”
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Fred Ahboltin’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.

