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tv   CBS News Bay Area Evening Edition 5pm  CBS  May 23, 2024 5:00pm-5:31pm PDT

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from cbs news bay area, this is the evening edition. we begin with breaking news in san francisco, a police shooting in the last hour or so now under investigation. >> good evening. i'm ryan yamamoto. >> and i'm elizabeth cook. here's a live look from our chopper over a still very active scene. anne makovec has the new information just in from investigators. anne? >> we are hearing police officers may have shot a person but are waiting for details from police. this is in the bayview taking another live look from our chopper over the scene. a lot of officers are in this area and the streets are blocked off. it's an industrial neighborhood near several warehouses. police have not confirmed anything yet, but we have heard there was a man with a gun in the area. police arrived on scene and shots were fired. here's a closer look from our map. it's near the intersection of jennings and donner right outside a facility called hong kong productions. this is some video posted on
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citizen app a little over an hour ago. there appears to be some activity on the left-hand side of your screen behind the gate and the street outside is blocked off. no word yet on if that man may have fired at police nor that person's condition, but we will keep an eye on this developing news and bring you the latest throughout the evening. the bay area desperately needs more housing, but is this busy parking lot the solution and the right place? >> sites like these are at the center of a new battle on the peninsula. to address the housing crisis, the state has ordered cities and counties to create a plan to add a certain number of homes or risk losing funding for the entire area. the goal is more than 441,000 new homes. >> the city of san mateo's share of that number is more than 7,000 homes. some city leaders just submitted their plan for approval, but a new lawsuit claims the numbers just don't add up. our kevin ko
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explains perform >> reporter: i'm at the bridgepoint shopping center in san mateo and this parking lot behind me is where the city says it can build 340 new housing units. the question is how? not just because of limited space, but according to a new lawsuit, there's no evidence that it would be allowed. >> the city says that it believes that 8 1/2 acres could be used for housing, that someone could maybe build a garage and then put housing next to it on 8 1/2 acres of the parking lot. the problem with that is that there's an agreement that goes back to when the center was created that says this place is for retail. >> reporter: that's one of the holes attorney tom mayhew says in the city of san mateo's housing plan. he says there is an agreement here at the
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bridgepoint shopping centers not allowing anything else but retail stores and parking lots to be built until 2056. in the city's plan it states the owners of the shopping center "expressed interest in mixed-use redevelopment." the san mateo city council adopted the ambitious plan which calls for more than 10,000 housing units across the city from 2023 to 2031. san mateo city manager stated in part," it's essential that we have housing opportunities not only for new residents, but for current residents who might otherwe be priced out of their community. this plan is very progressive and complies with state law requirements." corey smith is executive director of the housing action coalition which filed the lawsuit. >> at the end of the day this is about people, right? it's not about lawsuits or entitlements or units. we're trying to insure that everybody has a home. >> reporter: expanding housing in san mateo continues to be a contentious issue, something
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the housing action coalition's allie saperman recently faced. they received this email from take resident, "when did you get so fat?." >> i was really disappointed and again horrified to see i was facing the brunt of the lawsuit. >> reporter: the city said, "the plan will be submitted to hcd for formal review to confirm compliance with state law." >> we want to make sure cities are making their housing plans based on evidence instead of hope or speculation. >> you can read the full statement from the city of san mateo on our website at kpix.com. earlier this week a city council decided to advance a housing measure to the november ballot. if approved, it would raise density and height limits near caltrain stations. taking a live look at downtown oakland where plans
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are brewing on how to tackle the city's $177 million deficit. mayor sheng thao pitched her plan today. this comes a day after oakland leaders announced they will sell their share of the coliseum for $105 million to the african american sports and entertainment group. mayor thao says there are costs that need to be cut, but she is vowing not at the expense of public safety or public health. >> my budget will not reduce public safety. my budget will not close firehouses or libraries or recreation centers or animal services. i will not cut cops. i will not lay off our city workers, most of whom are oakland residents. >> she says her administration will instead focus on noncritical or underperforming contracts, increasing tax revenue and targeted hiring freezes. you're in for some heavy traffic this weekend as people
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set off for their memorial day travel plans. in the bay area aaa is predicting eastbound i-80 will see the most congestion. the worst stretch running from san francisco to the area near highway 37. if you're setting off this evening, best to stay pat, watch the newscast, leave after 7:00 p.m. if you're leaving tomorrow, hit the road before 11:00 a.m. or after 8:00 p.m. and for the return trip monday, avoid traveling from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. as for those taking off by plane this morning, travel through sfo seemed pretty easy going. >> i got up at 4:00 this morning, caught a flight at 6:15 and here i am. >> and it's been very smooth actually. >> smooth now, but things could change quickly. the tsa is forecasting that tomorrow will be the busiest day for air travel with as many as 3 million people passing through the airport checkpoints. airlines say they have been staffing up. so they hope they'll be able to avoid the mass cancellations that marred travel plans the last two
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years. good news was the weather was cooperating today as we head into the holiday weekend. here's a live look outside right now, the golden gate bridge. >> let's check in with first alert meteorologist darren peck joining us now. we're expecting a bit of a cooldown. >> you could kind of see what was coming in that view, a bunch of high clouds. we haven't had a lot of that lately. the pattern does change over the next few days and since we're going into a three-day weekend, let's show you what to expect for that first. we'll get saturday, sunday, and monday on here. it's kind of a generic way to look at the forecast with just three rows of numbers, but i think the important takeaway for the weekend is saturday, the coolest day in the seven-day forecast. it's also going to be the cloudiest day. we'll wake up saturday morning and have marine layer bay area-wide. you can see the difference in the numbers. look at saturday's daytime high if you're inland, upper 60s. look at the rest of the weekend, back to the mid-and upper 70s.
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it's not like we had a storm or we're getting rain, but it's going to be noticeably cloudier and cooler for saturday. cloudier and cooler than the last four days you just lived through and cloudier and cooler than the rest of the weekend will be after that. speaking of the rest of that weekend, here's the forecast for carnaval. saturday gray, sunday a lot more sunshine and temperatures in the low 60s. it's going to be a classic mission forecast in may. you really don't notice a whole lot of difference here. if you wanted just a little more sun and maybe slightly warmer over the course of carnaval, sunday will be the day. let me show you what tomorrow looks like for daytime highs and we'll use the virtual map and put on the daytime highs. these are already cooler than today. so the numbers for inland valleys had climbed well into the low 80s. tomorrow you've started to notice this cooldown. some places it's kind of dramatic with livermore going down to
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the upper 60s and temperatures for the rest of the bay right on the mark for average, plenty of sunshine. i'll be back with the full forecast in a bit. we'll look beyond that saturday gray and i'll have the rest of the week for you as well. walnut creek after more than five hours of debate in the woodlands neighborhood will soon be getting a new chick-fil-a restaurant. several residents complained it could bring unnecessary traffic congestion. in response the council ruled the new fast food restaurant cannot have a drive-thru. potholes are always annoying and sometimes dangerous. now we've discovered the number of damage claims on california freeways is going up, but fewer drivers are getting paid. >> if they denied my claim, are they paying any claims? >> coming up at 5:30, we're investigating the growing number of rejections by caltrans and which bay area freeways you may want to avoid. in san francisco the alamo
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square community is showing an outpouring of support for a very well known dog walker nam ed terry williams two days after a fire gutted his home and injured his elderly parents. terry williams grew up in the neighborhood. he's been the target of racist threats since building up his dog walking business. he was having a meeting in city hall about those hate crimes when the fire happened, still no word on a possible cause of the fire, but we did catch up with terry at alamo square today. he said his dogs are doing well, but his parents are still recovering. >> my mom, she's still in the hospital. she's still got like black stuff coming out of her lungs. she's diabetic and stuff. my dad's at home, well, at my sister's place, but he's got burns on his head and forehead and such. he had to get treated for his burns, but he's doing good. we just worry about my mom. >> williams said he lost everything in that fire, but
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he's not going anywhere. he's already to build back up. police in antioch are looking for the armed robber who stole nearly $90,000 in the contra costa county fair. investigators say two park employees were making a deposit at a bank monday night after the fair ended. the thief approached them with a gun allegedly and demanded the money along with the workers' personal belongings. still ahead, new video showing the incident that led to the arrest of the world's top golfer, what dash camera footage is revealing about the incident and why the officer involved is now facing discipline. >> he didn't do anything wrong. we will go to trial or the case will be dismissed. a long awaited announcement for sports and concert lovers fed up with those sky high ticket prices, how the justice department is taking on ticketmaster in the wake of a fiasco for taylor swift fans. >> things are changing a little bit luckily, but we still need more of those books. we'll meet the author
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shining a spotlight on one of the bay area's largest and most overlooked asian communities.
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new police footage released of scottie scheffler's run-in with louisville police where he was arrested and charged with multiple charges, including assault on a police officer. you can see scheffler's car being stopped by police and moments later he comes out of the car and then officers put him into handcuffs. police say scheffler refused to comply and accelerated forward in the vehicle dragging a detective to the ground. scheffler says the whole incident was just a misunderstanding that escalated and his attorneys say the new footage supports that. >> he didn't do anything
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wrong. we will go to trial or the case will be dismissed. we have no interest in settling the case. >> along with the felony charge, scheffler faces criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officers directing traffic. taking a live look at san francisco, residents are scratching their heads over a mysteriously flooded lot now nicknamed trash lake. a reporter observed some five feet of water standing there this week and you can see plastic trash as well as wood and metal debris floating in the standing water. the lot has been vacant several years and the city can only guess how it might have accumulated this much water. in san joaquin county a sinking ship is leaking oil and fuel into the waters of the delta. the ship called the aurora began sinking yesterday morning after it began leaking
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and taking on water. a containment boom now surrounds the boat as crews work to stop oil from spreading into the water or near wildlife. divers are being deployed to get a better look at the hole in the ship. new video showing a curious family of bears in the sierra. this ring camera video shows what looks like a mama bear and her two cubs checking out a home in truckee. a good reminder if you're headed to the mountains this weekend, watch out for the wildlife. >> i remember when i was camping up in tahoe, i went to get firewood and hear the ranger yelling bear, bear and then there was this big old bear just walking right through the campsite. >> it's their home. they were here first. >> yeah. >> they're like you're on my land. i don't know what you're doing. >> do not care about the people at all. >> i remember that one time i slept through the night entirely only to go to my car the next morning and find the box of cereal and bagels i'd left in the car were scattered throughout the campground. this was about 15 years ago. >> they're smart. >> i learned my lesson.
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>> they can open car doors. >> they are not messing around when they say keep food out of the car. let's talk about this change in the weather coming our way. it's going to be noticeably cooler the next couple days. we looked at that through the lens of both the big three-day holiday weekend and carnaval. there's one other kind of big event happening which is weather dependent. here's the forecast for bottlerock. we're inland here in napa. you don't notice as big of swing, but you still notice the warm-up by the time we get through on sunday, 75 the daytime high. saturday technically is the coolest day of the weekend, but you don't really notice it a lot. you'll start with morning clouds and have plenty of sunshine throughout the day. they know what they're doing by scheduling bottlerock this time of year. in napa it's going to be great, a very busy weekend. let's use tomorrow as the example only because i don't want to overlook the difference that's already about to take
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place for tomorrow. from a daytime high standpoint and you're all going to notice this, but really those kind of inland locations, look at san jose. your numbers were mid- to upper 70s today, upper 60s tomorrow. look at livermore. you were into the low 80s today, only going to the upper 60s tomorrow. saturday is the coolest day. saturday is the day when the clouds are going to fill back in. it's going to look different, but really it's tomorrow when the cooldown kind of really gets going, not like it's a cold snap or anything, but it's 10 to 15 degrees cooler tomorrow for many of our inland spots, san francisco low 60s. you won't notice a lot of difference in the city or along the coast from today till tomorrow. in those inland valleys you will. temperatures in the north bay are hanging onto a little warmth. it's really the inland east bay and south bay which get a head start on this cooldown which is taking us into saturday. let's look at how this plays out in terms of this for the rest of
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the forecast and what we'll do is use the forecast imagery and leave behind the bottlerock forecast. that's us today, no marine layer. let me show you how this comes back saturday. we'll go back for a wider view and use the forecast imagery to show you the next system coming into the west coast. watch what this thing does. it stays in the pacific northwest, but all of a sudden clouds rush back in. that's saturday, a lot more marine layer and cloudiness than today's satellite and the last several days. let's go closer and watch that again. a few high clouds tonight get pulled overhead. they aren't really that significant. they kind of start the cooldown for tomorrow. what you see show up here going into saturday, it's very subtle, but there was a weak little cold front there. as that thing leaves, behind it the marine layer really rushes in. that is a dramatic
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difference for saturday. we wake up on saturday morning and you're like oh, right, it is may. it's supposed to be gray here in the mornings like bay area-wide in may. it had been easy to forget that the last few days. it's really just saturday it's coming back because of that assist from the weak little cold front over head friday night into saturday. there's going to be so much marine layer to this, as we look at saturday's intrusion right here, there will be a little mist along the coast. saturday morning the marine layer is thick enough we get some of that marine layer mist and some of that will probably even be somewhat measurable like a 0.01-inch of rain. let's put it all in the seven-day forecast and use our inland microclimate first and see what happens here with the theme, saturday inland 67, cloudy in the morning. i think you'll have plenty of sunshine bay area-wide saturday afternoon. it's just the morning saturday we're looking
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at the marine layer gray. by the middle of next week, your daytime highs inland are going back up to the low and mid-60s. we'll do the same thing for our microclimate within the immediate bay itself, similar story in terms of cloudiness through the mornings and sunshine in the afternoon. guys, back to you. >> thank you. protesters returning to the campus of ucla today and not long after so did police. we'll have the very latest from southern california. meet the author who never saw herself in the pages of books. so she decided to write her own story about her own culture. >> so this story's very much about belonging and trying
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filipino americans are the second largest group among asian americans in the united states, yet their stories often go untold. >> anne makovec introduces to us a north bay author who put the raw emotion of a common immigration story into print. >> she really channeled those who came before her for this book. it is the story of so many filipino families. the children who were left behind while their parents came to the u.s. to be caretakers for americans, when they were finally able to send for those children, those children had to learn to bloom in a whole new world. may respicio is a typical filipino american girl raised in the bay area, but those who came before her didn't have it so easy. may is part of the first generation of her family to be born in the u.s. >> when i was growing up, there were never any books that featured a filipino or filipino
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american ever, not a single one and things are changing a little bit luckily, but we still need more of those books. >> so she decided to write one. it started as a novel that included 12 poems because the signature character it's about is 12 years old and it's written of the experience of generations before may, children whose mothers moved to america and worked until they could send for their families. she reads from her book a poem called "no more good-byes." >> the flight attendant leads me out bodies and faces, my wobbly legs, my trembling heart scanning for her. >> the raw emotion of a preteen adjusting to a brand-. brand new world. >> this story is very much about belonging and trying to figure out where you fit in. for me growing up as a kid in
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california within a very traditional filipino household, there were those moments where i wasn't sure where i fit in or which world to belong to. >> part of her story takes place in san francisco's botanical gardens where she and her fictional character spent time growing up. her book uses many metaphors of plants. >> this character learning to grow and she's got this wonderful garden inside of her and by the very end of the book she learns to bloom. she learns that you can bloom wherever you're planted. >> as may's book blossomed, she realized it needed to change, too. she went from writing a book of prose with a little poetry to a book of all poems. >> the poetry was such a powerful vehicle for such a tender story that i really wanted to go with that. >> including a poem called "home." >> i walk with my grandfather through a thousand shades of green, plants dressed in dew, flowers flooded in might as birds fill the trees with their wild loud songs.
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>> just one of many songs that may and others in the filipino community are ready to sing. 69% of filipino americans over the age of 18 were actually born outside of the u.s. >> thanks, anne. be sure to watch our special "roots of resilience, an aapi celebration" tomorrow at 4:00 p.m. you can find it on kpix and streaming on the cbs news app. up next, if your car is ever damaged on a california freeway, caltrans might owe you money. meet the woman working to make sure drivers get what they deserve. >> it just ripped the tire to shreds. >> he's like oh, oh, yeah. we know that pothole. and the justice department going after the country's largest promoter of live events, how consumers could benefit. he just hopped right in. so it was kind of like you didn't really know what was going on until he was in the boat. >> a sea lion surprise, the california college rowing team that picked up a s
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right now at 5:30, protesters returning to the ucla campus after they were forcefully removed earlier this month. and a critical state supreme court decision for businesses hoping to recoup some of their losses from the pandemic. and it's no secret. road conditions on bay area freeways can get extrem

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