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tv   ABC7 News 1100PM Repeat  ABC  May 7, 2020 1:07am-1:42am PDT

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home, but is your company spying on you? >> big swings in the seven day. we'll talk heat, cooldown, and showers. abc 7 news at 11:00 starts right now. >> announcer: now your health, your safety, this is abc 7 news. take longer than i think a lot of people think. it's going to take a lot longer than people are saying. >> while california will begin entering phase two, the bay area will not. only napa and solano counties will allow certain additional businesses to open under state guidelines. >> the numbers of deaths are still going up and we have not lowered the curve. >> governor newsom offered new financial relief to property owners delaying deadlines while the state works with counties to waive penalties. >> many people struggling to make ends meet and the property tax bills are so large.
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>> california is reporting the most yet in a single day. >> this is serious. never experienced anything like this in our lifetime. >> good evening. thank you for joining us. the pandemic is compounding the crisis in one san francisco neighborhood. a new report finds a stunning 285% jump in homeless tents in san francisco's tenderloin. j.r. stone is in the news room to explain what is behind a jaw dropping increase. >> the bottom line here, there are more homeless folks in san francisco in general and it can now be seen more than ever. >> the more crowded the streets get, i think just the more dangerous it can be for everyone. >> san francisco fire chief jeanine mickelson is voicing major concerns when it comes to this: not only the rise in the city's homeless population but where those individuals are coming from. >> unhoused folks coming in from out of town and basically trying
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to get themselves on a list for housing. some are being released from jail and coming here. i know couple kids from stockton, lee county. so, they're coming from all over. >> kelly cutler is with the coalition on homelessness. she says she has helped pass out more than a thousand tents. >> how many weeks are we into this pandemic, and yet we still don't have a safe place for folks who are forced to sleep on the street. >> the city says more than a thousand homeless individuals have been moved into hotel rooms, but that is far less than the 7,000 to 8,000 talked about early on. chief mickelson represents more than 1,700 in the department and says individuals are coming here for specific regions. >> they think they can come to san francisco and have a good time and party and, you know, get some handouts whether it's a hotel room or a tent or
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whatever. >> the idea that more people are coming in and actually looking for hotel rooms really puts a strain on a system that's already not up and running smoothly. >> we have plenty of folks here that we need to take care of already. >> the mayor says a plan is in place to address this block by block and tender loin and facing some of those folks out and using the street area near the library. more hotel rooms are needed and more space. those advocates disagree with the fire department saying many of the homeless folks with local. dan, ama, back to you. >> san francisco health officials are also trying a new approach to help the homeless. in an effort to keep people in quarantine, the department of public health is distributing alcohol and tobacco to some in isolation. dph staff administer the substances under the guidance of licensed physicians. >> in cases where people decide
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that they are going continue to use, our focus is using the best evidence to help people manage their addictions. >> in a few cases, dhp staff has helped patients by their own medical marijuana so they don't have to buy it recreation nally. the alcohol and tobacco are funded by private donations. what's happening now in the bay area is a real opportunity to build a better bay area when all of this is said and done. and abc 7 is committed to navigating this with you, helping you get back to whatever normal will be. one way thousands of californians are getting back to work is through an expanding contact tracing program that began in san francisco. abc 7 news reporter kate larson spoke with one woman who already has the perfect skill set, a librarian. >> this seemingly benign online interface is one of the most powerful tools in the fight
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against covid. it's meant to stomp outbreaks. >> it's very intense work, very satisfying. >> she's one of the 200 contact tracers in san francisco, a program that has been so successful it's beenstewide. before the pandemic, she was a librarian. >> i was really sad when the libraries closed, so this is, i think, a good use of my time. >> woo is trained on the system and this week got to work tracking outbreaks from home using a laptop to call people who were in close contact with someone positive for coronavirus. >> it's really well set up. there were some substantial conversations that i had to find out oh this is what's happening in this house hold. >> good contact tracers can talk to people and they're used to talking to people. they're used to interviewing people. we have tremendous need for people who speak spanish. >> dr. george rutherford is a uc professor of epidemiology. starting now ucsf and ucla will
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gip virtually training 3,000 contact tracers a week throughout california. all redeployed civil servant who not otherwise working. >> contact tracing for measles, we find people fast enough we can vaccinate them. this is letting the disease run its course and not infect anybody else. >> the tracing outcome also largely dependent on those on the receiving end of the call. >> overall san franciscans have been very cooperative. that makes the work a lot easier. >> kate larson, abc 7 news. the justice department is investigating a company that tried to sell california 100 million face masks. blue flame medical had only been in business for three days when it cut the half billion dollar deal. its owners claimed they could get n95 masks and other personal protective equipment through a chinese company. the deal fell apart and
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california was clawing its money back. an attorney for blue flame said the firm acted in good faith. house speaker nancy pelosi gave an update on coronavirus tonight. she said the challenge going forward is protecting each of california's unique communities. >> this fight that we're in is about fighting for the lives, the livelihood, and the life of our democracy. >> speaker pelosi said her focus now is making sure the billions of dollars being spent on resources goes to the people who need it most. she wants to make sure all californians have access to care and credit without creating a bigger economic divide. it is clear the covid-19 crisis has changed the way we work. with millions working from home, some companies are considering digital surveillance tools to make sure their employees are actually working when you're at home. abc 7 news reporter amanda dell castillo has the story.
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>> to some degree many of us are being monitored. on my personal phone, screen time shows when i'm most active and which apps i use most. my work communication, slack notifies colleagues whether i'm active or away. >> in a way that's a form of surveillance right there. and i think the question is how far are we all willing to go. >> with so many working from home, some companies are now using tools to determine whether people are actually doing their jobs. it's called digital surveillance and the demand for monitoring software has gone up. >> 16% of companies, they order these kind of software because they would like to monitor their employees. and companies on the other side who provide these kind of services saw 40% increase from their current customers asking for more licenses. >> more licenses to monitor more employees. while companies feel digital surveillance will increase productivity, some argue whether it really invades privacy. >> this is all very new in terms of legal ground and whatnot.
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but i think one of the interesting things will be is that the question of whether or not employers should even take the step. >> experts say these new tools require trust and transparency, communication about what's actually being recorded, is your boss keeping track of your key strokes? will cameras or microphones be turned on? will messages be read? >> the employer have the responsibility of telling the employees this is a software we are using for monitoring, and this is what we're going to monitor. >> workplace surveillance isn't new but trying to navigate the process during this pandemic definitely is. in san jose, i'm amanda dell castillo abc 7 news. as california reopens you can expect to see more traffic on the roadways. taking a look at your emeryville cameras, you can see more commute traffic compared to last month. the bay area transportation commission is worried we may see even worse traffic than before the coronavirus outbreak. at's bileiding public
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transit. >> when we reopen, we know we're not going to have packed transit. we know that. and that's because there's going to be social distancing or other requirements. people may not wish to come back. so, i think one thing we're going to get for sure is packed freeways and the question is what does that mean and what does that look like and we just don't know yet. >> the mtc released data today comparing all of the bay area's bridge traffic with a week in march for the same time last year. the 2020 numbers are way down compared to 2019 but it's starting to rise. birthdays and graduations have not been the same because of the shelter-in-place rules. now santa clara rule has banned car parades or drive through celebrations. even if everyone stays in their ca unless there's a blatant violation, they'll just issue
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citations about this. the coronavirus pandemic is new calls to shut down live animal markets. there's no shortage. there's lots of meat. >> reassuring words from california cattle ranchers tonight but they do have a warning. and why air fare prices are expected to take off, how much more you might be paying when the restrictions finally ease. i'm meteorologist sandhya patel. a taste of summer is coming up. i'll have the temperatures straight ahead. a look at jt wom"jimmy kimm live." >> thanks dan and ama. watch this. >> wasn't busy doing clearly everything else. >> you should coo
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to schedule an appointment. tonight a look at the bay area's live animal markets and new calls to shut them down because of coronavirus. the leading theory is the pandemic started in a live animal market in wuhan, china. but do some markets here pose a risk? abc 7 news iteam investigating
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this issue. >> eric mills has campaigned for 25 years to close the animal markets i toured the last few days. >> united states has markets similar to those in china where the coronavirus originated with animals living cheek to joule. with the human population and wild animals and domestic just a disaster waiting to happen. >> seafood stores with huge fish in tanks, many types of crustaceans, and live bull frogs imported from china. turtles go for $20. they have to be killed before a customer takes it home. >> we've had something like two dozen necropsies done on frogs and turtles done over the year. they're all diseased. >> over the year mills tried a lawsuit to close the markets, even got a bill introduced in sacramento. >> but it never worked. >> yes, never worked. >> community leader dang li
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tells me chinese americans wield political clout and they've successfully argued that the lye animal markets are part of their cultural traditions. >> it hurts some peoples' feeling because they got an old fashioned traditional thought. they say we eat this for more than 5,000 years. that's our culture. >> but the coronavirus may provide a new warning about live animal markets. the leading theory is covid-19 pass frd a bat to another animal and then a human at this market in wuhan china. >> having just one species is dangerous enough as we know from bird flu and swine flu and the like. but when you mix different species of animals together, you're just waiting for a huge disaster to happen. >> people for the ethical treatment of animals gave me this video of live markets happening right now even after the coronavirus pandemic erupted, all sorts of animals, wild and domestic, for human
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consumption. peta is calling for the immediate and permanent closure of all live meat markets worldwide as are members of congress including dianne feinstein. >> how can we tell china or vietnam or india to close their wet markets when we haven't done that here? >> this has been a point of contention for years and years, but it looks like there could be room for change. dang li tells me he would favor closing live animal markets if a link to the coronavirus pandemic is scientifically proven. >> if majority of opinion, i believe. >> if it was in the public good -- >> yeah, public healthy. >> and if we learn nothing else, we need to learn humility and to share the planet with others and with compassion, both human and non-human alike. >> henry stern has announced he's bouncing a measure to ban live animal markets. the san francisco department of
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public health tells me under current law these animal markets are allowed to operate but they would enforce a ban if it comes. for the i-team, dan >> you can read all of their reporting on our website, abc7news.com/iteam. if you have a question or concern, that's also where you can contact them. california ranchers and grocers are addressing concerns over potential looming meat shortage. they say there's plenty of beef to go around but the problem is how to get it to you. the pandemic has forced processing plants to shut down and that's creating a bottleneck between farms and grocery stores. they warn consumers will need atience in the weeks tocome. their advice if yo d want to wait, buy local. >> there are always faryou. you may not think there are if you live in l.a. or san francisco. there are farms very close. if you have the means and ability to support them, that's great. >> ranchers offer three other
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tips for shoppers. look for more bone-in cuts, accept that you may have to get frozen meat, and whatever you do, do not impulse buy. >> good advise. the cost of a plane ticket could spike more than 50% after the pandemic. that's the warning from an airline industry groups if social distancing measures are enforced. the the international air transport association says if they are forced to leave middle seats empty, airlines would struggle. it will deliver a blow to airline revenue this year. los angeles county officials announced the county would be reopening certain businesses and outdoor areas on friday. this comes as beauty salons and barbershops in california say they plan to sue the governor this week so they can reopen. a professional group representing the state's beauty professionals say they are small businesss that hire contractors and are not eligible for the
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paycheck protection program. governor newsom said it could be months before places like hair salons could reopen. horse racing is returning to golden gate fields in albany but there won't be spectators in the field. the track got permission to open again on may 14th. racing was suspended on april 2nd because of the coronavirus pandemic. more protocols are being worked out. all right. >> it was a nice day to get outside today. >> so nice outside today. will it continue? sandhya patel has the forecast. >> yeah, it is absolutely going to continue. the only difference is going to be we're going to turn up the heat. so, get ready for hot weather especially in the inland valleys the next two days. right now i want to show you a super view of the super moon. this is just going back in time watching the moon. the skies were so clear that we got an amazing shot there. the craters in the moon very visible. full flower moon is what it's known as in may as the flowers
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are all blooming. you can see another view of the moon later on in the night rising above the bay bridge. all right. here's a look at what's coming. high pressure building, temperatures going to be rising. that's what you need to know. today it was warmer. most areas in the low 60s to upper 80s. we're going to bump up the numbers to 90s tomorrow. clear skies now, north wind is holding temperatures up so it is 64 degrees right now in santa rosa. it's the same wind direction that pushed those temperatures up today. the view from our exploratorium camera, lovely right now, warm to hot weather the next two days, much cooler for mothers' day and looking at scattered showers early next week. temperatures in the 40s, 50s in the morning. a little patch of fog along the coast along the san mateo coast but i don't think it's really going to happen. it would have to all come together the right time and
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place. 88 south bay and san jose, 90 in morgan hill through the south bay so it is going to be hot on the peninsula. palo alto, mountain view, redwood city, mid 80s80s 77 downtown san francisco. sunset district is sunny and warm to hot in the north bay. 90 in santa rosa. heading into the east bay, 79 berkeley, 82 oakland, 84 caster valley. if you like sizzling summer like weather, you got it tomorrow. definitely stay hydrated tomorrow and stay inside if you can or seek shelter, a fan, ca, whatever you can do. fast forward we have a cold front coming through and it is going to produce showers going into tuesday. the computer models continue to trend wet as we get closer to early next week. i know it's may. we're not expecting a lot of rain but those spring showers
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will produce anywhere from .1 .1 to .33 of an inch. 60s, 70s coast side and then cooling off just in time for mothers' day, level one on the severe impact scale monday and tuesday. so, get ready to pull the umbrellas back out. talk about whip lash in the weather. >> that's a big change. but we could use a little rain. tomorrow, join us for race and coronavirus, a bay area conversation. we will talk about issues facing the latino community during the pandemic. you can watch here or live online on abc7news.com and on the abc 7 news app tomorrow. tomorrow, brandy performs a song she's dedicating
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a hospital in the uk got quite a surprise, a donation from banksy. southampton general hospital unveiled the work called game changer. it shows a child playing with a nurse doll wearing a face mask and cap. the super hero's batman and spiderman are left behind in a bin. it's the simple joys inspiring abc 7 news viewers during our shelter-in-place. here's a day in the life. ♪ ♪
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i often get asked what should i do if i think i might have corona virus? people who are sick should stay home. you don't go to an emergency room. you don't go to a clinic. you get on the phone and you ask for advice and instructions from your physician. we don't want you to go into the e.r. or the doctor's office without talking to them first, because you might spread corona virus to someone else. please visit coronavirus.gov for more information. good evening t. nfl has told teams to have protocols in place to reopen facilities may mayfor up every day at 6:00 a.m. putting in longgym. he says he'll miss deforest buckner who was traded to the colts but he's eager to see kid
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lao in person. >> he's just a beast, plays the run like we play it. he gets off the ball really fast, and he's just a giant human to replace buckner. i'm raetly excited. he seems like a good dude and i've been talking to him a little bit. >> i like that. he's a giant dude. the nba student on hold but klay thompson's rehab continues from acl surgery. it's called "above the waves" available on youtube and there are physical and mental challenges to conquer here. >> it's not just about getting your hours in the gym for your rehab. the psychological hurdles are probably the biggest thing i need to overcome. this isn't an exact science, you know? it's not a mathematical
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equation. takes a long time. it's about being consistent. being fearless. >> happy birthday to giants legend willie mays. he turned 89 years old today. willie spent all of his 22 year career with the giants making some of the greatest catches in history, also sluggig 262 homers. i could go on and on. arguably the greatest player of all time. time for call my play. darnell lewis sent this one in. you know the say, good things come in small packages. meet davyn lewis. they got him. no they don't. he's like a mini barry sanders. down at the 75 yards.
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hey davyn, we just called your play on abc 7. >> send me your
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thanks for joining >> announcer: today on "tamron hall," life in lockdown
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while battling an addiction isn't easy. forced isolation while trying to stay sober could be a recipe for disaster. a raw and real conversation about living with addiction during this crisis, right now on "tamron hall." ♪ >> tamron: welcome to "tamron hall" from my home. it's been two months since stay at home orders were put into place. how many of you said at the beginning of this, "i can't imagine having to say inside for a week?" and then a week turned in the several weeks, and here we are now eight months. i actually had a conversation with a from the everyday who's been sober for about two years. while my friend had some setbacks, something changed with this pandemic. like most of us, my friend was forced to shelter in place, and
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soon after revealed to me that the isolation, the loneliness, had triggered the desire to use again. we talked it out, and to my knowledge, so far, so good. but while this lockdown is keeping us all safe from exposure to the coronavirus, it can also lead to dangerous and even devastating outcomes. my first guest is on his way to celebrating three years of sobriety, and he's doing it all in the public eye. take a look. frankie grande and his younger sister, pop princess ariana grande, grew up in a close-knit family were music filled the house. frankie made his broadway debut in "mama mia." he appeared in "rock of ages," s include "hamlet," starring jude law. he made a big splash on the hit reality series, "big brother," raising his pop-culture profile. before he was evicted from the

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