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tv   ABC7 News 600PM  ABC  March 17, 2021 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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vaccine but it is different if you work or live in solano county. >> trenches reporter, laura anthony went to see vaccinations in vallejo in action. >> they just went to 50. >> reporter: 61-year-old linda and her husband thought they would have to wait weeks longer before getting the covid vaccine. >> hello, ladies. >> reporter: that is until solano county suddenly gave residents 50 and over the green light. we have been late waiting a long time. we feel like once we have been vaccinated a we will be listed from our shoulders and i can see my mother at her senior living complex. >> reporter: county health officials moved to the next stage after realizing many apartments at sites like the solano county fairgrounds were going on field. we were able to do it because we have the really good fortune of having exceptionally good relationships with our hospital providers and over the past month, we have been able to vaccinate tens of thousands of people each weekend and with that, we have been able to move
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through the tiers much more quickly. >> reporter: one of the reasons the county felt comfortable moving to the next age group is the efficiency of this mass vaccine site. from the moment somebody walks in this front door, to the time they walk outside the back door after the vaccination can be as old as little as 25 minutes. the site can quickly ramp up to 6000 shots per day seven days per weeks once supply is robust enough to support it. >> we have tweaked it continuously and we continue to make refinements. it is about really, safety first , customer service and throughput. >> reporter: those receiving the shot here say it is not only quick and easy, it is a huge relief. >> today is the day i have been waiting for to have the sense of peace that has not been here in so long. >> reporter: in solano county, laura anthony, abc7 news. in just six weeks, disneyland will reopen.
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ceo, bob chapin made the announcement this morning. >> after a year of being closed, we are ready to make music and magic all over again. >> reporter: the reopening of disneyland california adventure is set for april 30th. to start, only california residents will be able to visit with a 15% capacity limit. just will need to use reservation systems and wear masks. most attractions will be open but there will not be parades or nighttime spectaculars. disney is the parent company of abc7. onto the -- rather, to wear green, it is good to be orange. cemetery no san mateo was the only county to be in the orange tier. the timing could not be better. cornell bernard joins us live. are people partying responsibly? >>reporter yes, what a difference a year makes. this st. patrick's day, looking a lot more green and a lot more
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-- this is o'neill's pub on b street in san mateo. there is a huge crowd for the fire truck to pass, inside and out, this st. patrick's day, a bit more subdued but a move to the orange tier giving folks a lot to toast about today. >> a toast to health, happiness and st. patrick's day insight o'neill's irish pub in san mateo. >> i am here because it is st. patrick's day and my name is erin. >> reporter: everyone was enjoying a beer while thinking orange. >> today is a good day to celebrate that we moved into the orange chair back -- tier. i'm excited that we have moved into normalcy. >> reporter: today's the day we moved from 25 to 50% capacity
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inside. >> it is a good day to celebrate all the little holidays. >> reporter: remember last year's st. patrick's day? no one does. that is because it got canceled due to the covid lockdown. >> in two or three months, we thought we would be back to normal. little did we know, it has been a year. >> reporter: lawrence is wearing the green at fiddlers green. mike campbell was celebrating his son's first st. patrick's day. >> are excited about it, we being able to support local businesses and eat outside. also to be able to eat indoors now is very exciting. >> reporter: almost a full house indoors. sandra spent months putting her irish outfit together hoping she would be lucky enough to show it off. >> it is nice to be with my friends. i have a lot of irish friends and that means a lot to me. i am 3% irish. >> reporter: the orange tier
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means covid rates are slowing and more people are getting vaccinated but it does not mean we are out of the woods yet. >> very exciting times in san mateo county but again, wear your mask and make sure you are socially distant. avoid gatherings and hopefully, all will go well. >> reporter: of o'neill's. this bar like others are partnering with local restaurants to provide food to patrons. it is a win-win for small businesses which have been challenged this year. today, there is hope that things are finally getting better. live in san mateo, cornell bernard, abc7 news. >> cornell, when it comes to vaccinations, how is san mateo's progress so far? >>reporter we were just told that 215,000 people have been vaccinated in the county so far. about 790,000 people live here so still a long way to go but the county says it needs more doses from the state this week alone. they only got 5000 so they need a lot more to make a difference.
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>> yes, that seems to be the story all across the bay area. thank you, cornell. san francisco leaders are us optimistic they will reach orange tier status next week. today they gathered one year since sheltering in place. it seems like from the start of the shelter-in-place, seems like this will never be forgotten. the bay area was the first in the country to take this drastic step. speaking today, san francisco mayor, london breed reflected. >> there was a sacrifice. there were people who did not make it through this pandemic. there were businesses that have been around since before i was born that did not make it. our children have suffered. our seniors in isolation have suffered. our mental health. >> at the time the shelter-in- place was only set for monday -- one month.
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as we know it would stretch much longer than that. mills college in oakland is planning to no longer grant degrees after 2023. the board of trustees reached the decision facing declining enrollment worsened by the pandemic. >> they are very cost sensitive and concerned about their careers that they might be able to earn and support themselves and there families and lift up their communities and they want to try to make a difference in the world. this has been a place where we have been able to make a difference in every day we are here it has mattered yet students are not choosing to come to places like mills as often as they used to. >> mills first opened as a women's seminary in 1852. after it finishes serving students, the college will shift to become mills institute. the pandemic has brought about a lot of changes and after a year of this we are focused on the path forward. when it comes to work, institute for the future director tells us one of the
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big draws for people coming back to the office maybe social time. >> some people are realizing we don't need to be in the office all the time so i think that is going to continue that we are going to kind of be in the hybrid situation with a lot more people working online and not necessarily being in the office all the time though i do think in many ways, the pandemic also showed us the importance of being together and a lot of people are anxious to be together because we are social beings and we want to be working together. so i think there is going to be kind of a mix. reconsideration of what can we do online and what would we need to do to be together. >> thanks to marina gardez. some workplace changes are temporary but others may become permanent it could make for happier employees and managers. that story is coming up. also had -- >> san francisco is -- we should -- it is all done.
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he was attacked in the city on his first day back at work. his story is one example of what asian americans face. what is being done about it? i'm spencer christian and our final storm for the
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feel real relief. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. an update to a developing story. a man who was's shot by a danville police officer has died at the hospital. officer andrew hall fired at tyrell wilson after
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pulled out a knife. hall is on paid administrative leave, part of department policy. investigators and the das office are reviewing the incident. hall also killed a man while on duty in 2018. developing news, a deadly attack in georgia has sent fear through the agent american committed and put some local police departments on alert. the san francisco, and oakland police department are monitoring the case and have increased patrols. 21-year-old robert long faces charges in the killing of eight people at three spas in the atlanta area. six victims were of asian descent. the asian american community views it as an attack on them during the recent wave of assaults since the pandemic began. and there was an attack involving asian americans in san francisco just this morning. it happened on market street. the victims were in there 70s and 80s. it is outrageous the what is being done about this?
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melia melendez is responding. >> as the pd is acknowledging, yes, there has been an alarming spike in the number of attacks in the asian community. this morning, just as the police chief was treating about it with the #stop asian hate, yet another incident was taking place on market street. >> reporter: wednesday morning, two elderly people were attacked on the corner of market street
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-- a travel agent who is attacked monday in san francisco. he has decided to leave the bay area. >> san francisco is too dangerous right now. we should -- is gone. it's all gone. >> reporter: during this period of so many physical attacks, san francisco has also seen burglaries go up significantly from from january through -- during the same period this year. >> we still have a lot of work to do. we just have to keep at it. >> here is a question asking, should there be police surveillance cameras to help deter this kind of violence? if you remember, in 2019, san francisco became the first city in the country to say no to the use of facial recognition technology by any city department including, yes, san francisco police. in the newsroom, lijana wallendas, abc7 news.
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attacks against asian americans is causing community leaders to demand local and state leaders to step in to stop anymore violence. >> yesterday's murders but on top of two more attacks in san francisco and oakland. on top of thousands of others. this must be an inflection point. enough is enough. >> today, several asian american pacific island committee leaders met to address yesterday's killings at atlanta's spas. governor newsome is looking to appointing a attorney general as soon as possible. spencer will show you rain and where it will start. that is next. and check out weather around the area, look for our bay area connected act app and you will
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by harnessing california's abundant wind and solar energy, we have the power to take on climate change. use less from 4 to 9 pm to keep california golden.
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these are real people, not actors, who've got their eczema under control. with less eczema, you can show more skin. so roll up those sleeves. and help heal your skin from within with dupixent. dupixent is the first treatment of its kind that continuously treats moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, even between flare ups. dupixent is a biologic, and not a cream or steroid. many people taking dupixent saw clear or almost clear skin, and, had significantly less itch. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur, including anaphylaxis, which is severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems, such as eye pain or vision changes, or a parasitic infection. if you take asthma medicines, don't change or stop them
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without talking to your doctor. so help heal your skin from within, and talk to your eczema specialist about dupixent. if your financial situation has changed, we may be able to help. not to our special "california dreaming" which takes a closer look at the area threatening the california dream and the people working to keep that dream alive. >> today we look at our state's
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beautiful coastline and its rich biodiversity. so much to do and explore in and around the ocean and it's what makes the golden state special. >> people are drawn to the coast. beaches and surfing is the first thing that comes to mind but the thing that is interesting about california's coastlines it is not surf. you have the title pools and the beautiful sandy beast experience. >> california's coastlines are unique because of the top are graffiti and because california is such a long state. it covers many different lead into the low don'ts from san diego which is almost in the tropical region, all the way up to northern california and the california cello islands are some of the most beautiful places in the world. >> right off the coast here in long beach, the aquarium but california has populations of -- that migrate through and blue whales are the largest animal
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it is magical. there are not many places as developed as california is but yet you can see all of these things. we are very lucky in the state of california to have the coastal act which was passed in 1976 which essentially enshrines the entire coastline of the state of california as part of the public commons. this belongs to the public. and helping people to understand this is theirs is a natural gateway to entering into a much deeper for conversation about how they can help to protect it for generations. >> california is an amazing place. we take it for granted because we live here but it is one of the most unique ecosystem environments in the world. we are recognized is a buyer diversity as a biodiversity hotspot. you can come here to see species you can see nowhere else. for example, sea otters and seabirds tha come annually and the shallow coastal regions are
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just perfect for kelp forests. >> kelp, we are losing it. that kelp forest is not just a nursing ground for fisheries, it provides carbon because of how fast it grows and reduces storm damage. kelp reduces the surge kelp, we lose protection. >> we have exacerbated the coastal sweet squeeze because the areas where we see the most problems as it relates to sea level rise are these areas that have been highly developed. we have homes that are literally falling into the sea but it also has serious implications for the public. we think about our beachs beaches disappearing. that is a public resource that is also disappearing. we really need to stop using so much plastic. and having it end up in the ocean. we really need to cut down on our emission so we don't have acidification but you don't convince people about that by
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telling them that abstractly but you can if they can feel the experience and the animals and then talk about these issues. >> the most important thing anyone can do to preserve our coastlines is to go to the beach. find your favorite coastal area. 02 it year after year and develop a sense of love. you don't want to protect what you don't love? >> something that is just as important as all of our work protecting our ocean waves and beaches is in sharing our relationship with the ocean waves and beaches. this does not just belong to people who live within a mile of the beach. this belongs to everybody. >> that is incredible. we live in such a great place when you think about our coastline. you can stream all of our california dream stories on demand including our 30 minute "california dreaming" special
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right now on our abc7 bay area connected tv app and you can download it now. we are not quite at beach weather just yet. unless you like it chilly. >> and rainy. >> give it about a week and we might be closer but not yet. here is a look clouds across the bay area and we will see some green popping up on the screen in a few hours because rain is on the way. here is the view from the exploratory camera. we are looking at san francisco where it is 51 degrees with temperatures in the low to mid 50s at oakland, el camino, morgan and a cool look from emory bay. morganville, the sky is getting cloudier and cloudier with a sliver of setting sun. 51 @ drug -- 51 at santa rosa, and this is the view from the top mount tam. various with us on friday d spring saturday morning
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at 2:37. we will have spring-like weather for the weekend but first an approaching storm ranks one on the impact scale so tomorrow and friday we can expect light to moderate rainfall. about 2/10 to 6 tenths of rain. generally at the coast and higher elevation -- by 5:00 tomorrow morning as the commute gets underway rain beginning to surge into the bay area. first in the north bay but it will spread quickly to other parts of the bay area. it will continue through the day breaking up into more scattered showers late in the afternoon but both the morning commute and afternoon commute will be impacted by this wet weather. friday won't be much -- there won't be much left of the storm but isolated lingering showers mainly in the morning hours and by late afternoon friday we should see at least partial clearing. rainfall totals, generally in between 2/10 and 6/10 of an inch, in santa rosa, two
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thirds, just under one half inch in san francisco, across the bay in oakland just over one quarter inch and in san jose test under one quarter inch likely. in the sierra, some snow. a winter weather advisory in effect from 11:00 tomorrow until midnight friday. 6 to 12 inches generally. overnight, rain approaches, mid- 40s, up to about 60 in the mild list 7-day forecast, spring begins with spring-like weather, sunny skies, milder conditions both days. a few clouds will appear on monday and we get milder or warmer weather tuesday and wednesday. >> all right, spencer, thank you so much. we want to tell you about breaking news. let's take a look from sky7. a live ongoing cliff rescue. this is right next to lake merced. you can see the people there, the first responders. it looks like there may be somebody on the ground there as well. san francisco firefighters are bringing two people slowly to
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safety. both appear at this point to be okay. úwe will watc give you any updates here on air as well as online. >> you can see how steep it is. as we continue, the coronavirus pandemic will be over at some point of course but how much of what we have been through will stay with us? tonight, we will look at the path forward when it comes to workplaces. >> my specific situation a lot of families that have returned have been the families with more needs. getting school classrooms doesn't guarantee students will
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where can a healthier heart lead you? for people with heart failure taking entresto, it may lead to a world of possibilities. entresto is a heart failure medicine prescribed by most cardiologists. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. heart failure can change the structure of your heart so it may not work as well. entresto helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. and with a healthier heart, there's no telling where life may take you. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto for heart failure. entrust your heart to entresto.
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building a better bay area for a safe and secure future. this is abc7 news. covid-19 hit home a year ago today when the bay area
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started to shelter in place. cities like san francisco just emptied out as you can see from drone view seven. remember these images? we have all lived through so many dramatic changes in the past year. >> it was eerie when we first saw the images. the pandemic changed our workplaces. that is a focus of building a better bay area. abc news which changes would become permanent. >> reporter: looking back we know how the workplace had to change because of covid-19. people work from home, held seemingly endless meetings over zoom, remote learning meant parents had additional childcare duties, stress and anxiety increased. all of this is expected to have a lasting impact on the workplace. going forward, companies will find themselves managing employees' lives. they recognized dealing with the upheaval affected mental health. many companies again to offer rental health counseling. is more elected to work at home they lost visibility at the office so business consultants
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are warning the gender wage gap will worsen. >> what we will likely see if we don't do anything about it is managers giving raises to their mail in office employees at the expense of the female employees. >> reporter: employees have woken the mall mold of 9-to-5 at the office. that will be difficult to reign in. by demonstrating the remote productivity workers now determine where and what time they work. >> there are morning people, night owls. let people work when it makes the most sense for them. you are actually rewarding yourself as an employee by having a more productive workforce and the employees are happier as well. >> reporter: the call for greater diversity and inclusion have become that means companies will need to stand for something to reflect the values of their employees and executive leadership. >> they put their reputation on the line to support one cause or another. they get good results because the employees that feel passionately about that issue are more engaged from it.
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>> reporter: with some workers expected to split their work week between home and the office, companies may downsize. too many desk sit vacant. estimates in the bay area say it cost companies an additional 45% over salary for office, parking and other perks. >> the bicycles to go back and forth between buildings, and the lavish cafeterias are probably a thing of the past. >> reporter: construction of new office space continues which could accommodate more hiring or it could sit vacant. one thing is certain, service and retail workers who lost their jobs learned how to survive a pandemic, taking on gig jobs to get by and this shows how they can reinvent themselves during economic turmoil. >> we have this amazing human resource. we have people who are incredibly resilient who are eagle eager to do things and given an opportunity they can do amazing things. >> reporter: david louis, abc7 news. all week long we take a look at the lessons learned
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from the pandemic and the path forward to a better bay area. if you want to stream our first full path forward special, download the area connect to tv up wherever you stream. the 26 minute show is featured on the home screen. education is a key pillar in our efforts to build the bay area. for months we have been hearing from parents were eager to get their kids back to personal in person learning. i recently had a conversation with a local teacher who says in her experience that isn't the case. lydia crews teaches third grade in redmond city. she returned to class for in person learning in january and says it is not as simple as all the families wanting kids back in class and all teachers resisting in person learning. she says much of the hesitation from returning kits to class has been from parents. >> even in the fall, there were
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the first to sign up kids once that was an option and i have a lot of families who are still the majority honestly who are choosing to keep their kids in distance learning even when in person learning has been an option now for over two months at my school. >> why do you think that is? >> safety is still the biggest concern. a lot of families talk about wanting their children vaccinated before they return to the classroom. and different health issues or parents that worry there child has asthma and they might not be safe in the classroom. also the school and district do a good job with our distance learning in the fall and put a lot of time into training and money into creating a robust program there so some families say the children are doing fine. >> reporter: you are seeing a trend or pattern which kids are returning and which are choosing to stay in distance learning? >> in my specific situation a lot of the families who returned have been once with more needs and maybe it could be because they are the ones able to coordinate the job with dropouts and pickup with a half-
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day program or with their work able to accommodate that schedule better. >> really cool. >> lydia has kids in the classroom for three hours in the afternoon. right now, she has person and 15 remote. she has been back with kids since january. some of her colleagues have been back with kids since november so she points out it is not just private schools that have been open for some time. even before the pandemic, most educators and districts agreed our education system was broken. with students returning to classroom learning, what are the opportunities for transformation? tomorrow at 6:00, an inside look at the path forward for bay area's schools. d-day, deadline date to return in signatures to recall governor gavin newsom. a status check on how this is likely to succeed. he told me i was the fourth
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case that week he had seen. the e.r. doctors are seeing an increase in people getting sick from cannabis with what had
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new at six 8:00, from the i- team, bay area emergency room doctors are seeing an increase in patients with what had been a rare reaction to canvas use. melanie woodrow has the story. >> reporter: when prescription back pain medications made kathleen adams groggy, she switched to cannabis as a more natural, holistic alternative. this was the cartridge that goes onto the battery. >> reporter: at first her back pain subsided but after a couple of years, she said she needed more cannabis to get the same released. >> the last purchase i made was a highly concentrated like 70% product and i went through that in just a couple of days whereas normally it would last me
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weeks. >> reporter: in early february, adams woke up sick in her stomach, vomiting and unable to regulate her body temperature. i have had babies and kidney stones but this was, by far, the worst, most uncomfortable, painful, scary thing i have gone through. >> reporter: she went to the emergency room where she was treated for a stomach bug and sent home. a few days later she was back in the e.r. sheet mentioned the dr. that torching hot baths brought her relief. a light went off and he said it sounds like chf -- chs. >> cannabinoid -- syndrome. >> it is almost always related to cannabis or marijuana from chronic everyday use for quite some time. >> reporter: dr. christopher caldwell is the chief of emergency medicine at zuckerberg san francisco hospital. he did not treat adams but he said the number of patients he sees like her is up. >> before once a week or maybe
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a couple of times a month and now it is pretty much every show. shift. >> reporter: legalization of marijuana he says has played a role. dr. keith humphreys, a professor at stanford university in psychiatry agrees. >> the growth we are seeing in cannabis consumption is in this population of people who used to smoke once or twice a week an hour smoking many times a day and that is the critical risk factor for developing this condition. >> reporter: dr. humphreys says often times, people don't realize it is cannabis making them sit sick and they will use more to alleviate symptoms. >> there is nothing good or bad about the plant it can be useful and have health applications but else, it can have adverse effects. >> i don't want anyone else to go through what i went through and not know what it was and continue doing it. >> reporter: she says send she stopped using cannabis, her symptoms have improved. >> i urge everyone to be careful and cautious and know
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your body. >> reporter: melanie woodrow, abc7 news. want to save hundreds on your wireless bill? with xfinity mobile, you can. how about saving hundreds on the new samsung galaxy s21 ultra 5g? you can do that too. all on the most reliable network? sure thing! and with fast, nationwide 5g included - at no extra cost? we've got you covered. so join the carrier rated #1 in customer satisfaction... ...and learn how much you can save at xfinitymobile.com/mysavings.
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just hours ago, abc7 news was in fairfield at the county registrar of voters as volunteers dropped off the final batch of signatures in the effort to recall governor gavin newsom. the deadline to submit signatures is today and organizers say they have more than enough. one volunteer tells us is recall is not just about california's future. >> a lot of what this recall is about is to end his career so he cannot run for president so that is a big part of it. >> strong words. former san diego mayor kevin faulconer says he hopes to replace governor newsome. the republican appeared on our afternoon program "getting answers" and two told our christian see that he can win despite
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state. >> the one-party rule has not been working for california for over a decade. people want a competition of ideas. people want leadership that is going to get results. falconer says he was able to get results in san diego as a republican mayor and the majority democratic city. he said newsom has failed to lead when it comes to getting schools reopen. the governor defended his decisions during a media blitz yesterday. we caught up with him at a school tour in alameda. >> 9000 of the 11,000 schools now in the state have made a firm commitment with an opening date or are, like this elementary school, back in person. >> to understand how a recall works, check out our step-by- step explainer. you can find it on our website, abc7news.com and on our abc7
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bay area connect ed tv app. for now, we need to explain the timing of the next rain. we do, one last storm before winter comes to an end. >> that is right, winter's last hurrah. here's a look at the abc7 storm impact scale to give you an idea of the intensity. the storm will produce light to moderate rain fell starting early morning and continuing friday gusty at times with winds gusting 25 to 35 miles per hour. meanwhile in the coast and over the hills, the timeline over the arrival. during the commute it will start to rain and the rain will get heavy at times. then it will lighten up going into the afternoon and evening. expecting wet morning commute and it will be pretty much over by midday or midafternoon friday. rainfall totals will generate rains from about 2/10 of an inch to 6/10 of an inch for most of the bay area. there will be snow in the sierra. a winter weather advisory will
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be in effect there from tomorrow morning to friday, tomorrow morning, 11:00 a.m. until midnight friday. 6 to 12 inches expected. overnight in the bay area, mid- 40s and highs tomorrow not so high, mid-50s at the coast and mid to upper 50s just about everywhere else. here is the accuweather 7-day forecast. springlike arrives saturday morning, 2:37 a.m. a mild, sunny, springlike weekend and milder a warmer weather tuesday or wednesday. the weather is looking good. >> yeah, it certainly is. thank you, spencer. i will tell you what else is looking good. some news today for san francisco 49ers. sports director larry beil is here with that. >> i thought you were going to say it was me. >> while that is true, too -- >> i hate to bag but i will. this will be a vacation that trent williams of the niners never forget he becomes the highest paid offensive lineman in nfl history while on
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joint pain, swelling, tenderness. my psoriasis. cosentyx works on all of this. cosentyx can help you look and feel better by treating the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. watch me! get real relief with cosentyx.
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now abc7 sports with larry beil. >> good evening. warriors on the road in houston and they are shorthanded again. james wiseman, eric paschal in covid health and safety protocols along with several staff members so they cannot play and it is unclear how long they will be out. much more of a burden on draymond green. let's start with something you rarely see. of on loony left wide open and buries the three just a second on the season so you know this is going to be a good night. racking up assists, tremont green draymond green back cuts steph curry. a triple-double already. second quarter, jordan poole, a new player coming back from the g league play. then
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like he has been watching some old tim hardaway takes it to the rack. houston is terrible, have lost 17 in a row and about to become 18. 83-69 warriors in the third quarter. 49 to -- 49ers tackled trent williams is on a beach in mexico and it it's going to taste a lot better knowing you are going to be the highest paid offensive leader in nfl history with eight six-year $138 million deal that includes 50 my million dollars in guaranteed money. he is an elite talent, the top priority for the 49ers to re- sign. he broke the news by social media that said that alex mack would be joining him in the red and gold. tonight the front office signing williams, mack and kyle use jeff, the fullback who shared this story. i'm afraid to some details but to get face times from your owner and your gm and head coach and speak with their families and be comfortable. it's like i'm speaking with my own family. this is real conversations and
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genuine joy. that is why i feel so connected to this program. >> the raiders made some curious moves. they traded center rodney hudson, one of the best in the league for a third round pick to arizona. word is they are sending gabe jackson the guard to seattle for a fifth rounder and they signed solomon thomas, the third pick out of stanford but did not live up to expectations with the 49ers and he is coming out of a torn acl. thomas, reported the lookup worth up to $5 million. tonight, ramon laureano and buddy read both on the shelf, lori on a ramon laureano restart his quad. a.j. starting for the a's against casey. he strikes out whitner at field, hunter dozier and bubba starling all in the first. pocket those two innings, allows two runs. jed lowrie who doubled comes round to score and the a's win by a final of 10-5.
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for the 49ers as they keep three guys that they absolutely wanted to have back and we will see what else they might have in store as rumors out there, deshaun watson perhaps but we will see. that is just speculation. all right, good. intriguing. at least they made some good decisions. tonight on abc7 at 8:00, catch the goldbergs followed by american housewife, the connors and call your mother. at 10, catch the con and stay with us for abc7 news at 11:00. >> lots of good tv watching and you can watch all of our new newscasts live and on-demand. just go to through our area connected tv app. you can download the app now wherever you stream. is the rain coming? come on! what else are you going to do? that is it for this edition of
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abc7 news. thank you so much for joining us tonight. i'm ama daetz. >> and i'm den ashford. we appreciate your time. have a great rest of your evening and we will see you again at 11:00.
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where can a healthier heart lead you? for people with heart failure taking entresto, it may lead to a world of possibilities. entresto is now approved for more patients with chronic heart failure. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about prescription entresto.
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♪ this is "jeopardy!" introducing today's contestants, a certified financial planner from falls church, virginia... a librarian from nacogdoches, texas... and our returning champion, a community organizer originally from worcester, massachusetts... whose 1-day cash winnings total... and now, here is the guest host of "jeopardy!", katie couric. hi, everyone. and thank you, johnny gilbert. welcome to "jeopardy!" yesterday's game was tough but our champ brendan sargent made it through with $7,600 as you just heard. that said, we've already given away
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over $150,000 to stand up to cancer because "jeopardy!" is matching what our players win each game. so brendan, morgan, anthony, let's get started. the categories are... ...and finally... brendan, you're up. let's start with terrific tv for $200. brendan. - who's maya rudolph? - right. tv for $400. this actor says logan roy, his character on "succession", has become my evil twin. brendan. - who's brian cox? - good. $600, tv.

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